Design
Curved No
The TV has incredibly thin bezels, helping it to blend into your environment when it's not in use. Like all OLED TVs, the panel portion of the TV is incredibly thin. The overall design looks very similar to the Samsung QN90B QLED. The heavy central stand looks great and takes up very little space.
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Design
Uniformity Pictures
The results after four months have been updated after running the main pixel compensation cycle on the TV. After a firmware update released by Samsung, the large compensation cycle now runs automatically on the TV, and it's very effective at reducing the appearance of permanent image retention, but it doesn't remove it entirely.
Color | Pre Compensation Cycle | Post Compensation Cycle |
50% Gray | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
Red | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
Green | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
Blue | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
Cyan | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
Magenta | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
Yellow | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
5% Gray | Pre Picture | Post Picture |
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LEARN ABOUT ACCELERATED LONGEVITY TEST
Design
The center-mounted stand is relatively small. Due to the large size of the TV relative to the stand, it wobbles a bit, but it settles quickly. The stand lifts the display about three inches above the table, so most soundbars fit in front of it without blocking the screen.
Footprint of the 65-inch stand: 14" x 11.5"
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Design
Wall Mount VESA 300x200
The back of the TV is made up of two sections. The central panel that houses the electronics is made of smooth plastic. There are covers included to hide the inputs and to help with cable management. The inputs aren't easy to access if you wall-mount it with a fixed mount, especially once the covers are in place. The replacement model, the Samsung S95C OLED, uses an external Slim One Connect input box instead.
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Design
Borders 0.31" (0.8 cm)
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Design
Max Thickness 1.61" (4.1 cm)
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8.5 Design
The TV has excellent build quality. The materials used feel premium, and there's very little flex to any of the panels. The stand supports the TV well, but there's a bit of wobble due to its large size. There's a slight bend to the main panel of the display, and just moving it around flexes it a bit, but this is common with OLED displays since they're incredibly thin. Unfortunately, the display shows fingerprints easily, and they can be difficult to remove.
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10 Picture Quality
Contrast
Native Contrast
Since OLED displays use self-emissive pixels instead of a backlight, the Samsung S95B has a nearly infinite contrast ratio. It allows it to control the brightness of each pixel individually, so it can display bright highlights right next to perfect blacks with no blooming or haloing.
With any display, deep blacks are mainly noticeable if you're in a dark room, but it's even more important with this TV as it lacks a polarizing filter, so blacks appear raised, and the TV has a slight pink tint to it if there's even a bit of light in your room.
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LEARN ABOUT CONTRAST
10 Picture Quality
Since this TV uses self-emissive OLED technology, there's absolutely no blooming around bright highlights or subtitles in otherwise dark scenes.
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10 Picture Quality
Local Dimming
Backlight
Dimming Zones Count Of Tested TV
The panel doesn't have a backlight, but thanks to its nearly infinite contrast ratio, it has the equivalent of a perfect local dimming feature with no zone transitions. We still film the zone transition video on the TV so you can see how the screen performs and compare it with a TV that has local dimming.
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9.5 Picture Quality
The TV's contrast and dark details in Game Mode are nearly identical to the 'FILMMAKER' Picture Mode, but just a tad brighter.
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8.1 Picture Quality
Hallway Lights (~1950 cd/m²)
Yellow Skyscraper (~700 cd/m²)
Landscape Pool (~300 cd/m²)
Peak 2% Window
Peak 10% Window
Peak 25% Window
Peak 50% Window
Peak 100% Window
Sustained 2% Window
Sustained 10% Window
Sustained 25% Window
Sustained 50% Window
Sustained 100% Window
Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)
Update 18/12/2023: The TV is slightly dimmer with firmware 1602. While some of that dip can be attributed to the longevity test, the brightness difference since our last retest is too big to be attributed to the longevity test alone. Still, it's not a noticeable difference in actual usage.
The Samsung QD OLED has great peak brightness in HDR. Unfortunately, large bright scenes are still significantly dimmer than smaller highlights due to the TV's aggressive Automatic Brightness Limiter (ABL).
These measurements are after calibrating the HDR white point with the following settings:
- Picture Mode: FILMMAKER
- Brightness: Max
- Contrast: Max
- Color Tone: Warm2
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LEARN ABOUT HDR BRIGHTNESS
8.1 Picture Quality
Hallway Lights (~1950 cd/m²)
Yellow Skyscraper (~700 cd/m²)
Landscape Pool (~300 cd/m²)
Peak 2% Window
Peak 10% Window
Peak 25% Window
Peak 50% Window
Peak 100% Window
Sustained 2% Window
Sustained 10% Window
Sustained 25% Window
Sustained 50% Window
Sustained 100% Window
Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)
Overall, the Samsung QD OLED is about as bright in 'Game' Mode as in 'FILMMAKER' Mode. It doesn't track the PQ EOTF as well, though, as most scenes are over-brightened, as you can see here. The TV is more accurate when you enable Game HDR, seen here, but now it's slightly too dim in dark and bright scenes.
These measurements are after calibrating the HDR white point with the following settings:
- HDR Picture Mode: Game Mode
- Brightness: Max
- Contrast: Max
- Color Tone: Warm2
- Color Gamut: Auto
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8.2 Picture Quality
600 Nit Tracking Delta
1000 Nit Tracking Delta
4000 Nit Tracking Delta
The TV has great PQ EOTF tracking, so most content is displayed at the correct brightness level. Still, it's a bit too dark on all content, especially in darker scenes. For content mastered at 600 and 1000 nits, the panel clips anything above its peak brightness, so there's a loss of fine detail. Inversely, the TV slowly rolls off to its peak brightness with content mastered at 4000 nits, which preserves bright highlights.
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LEARN ABOUT PQ EOTF TRACKING
6.7 Picture Quality
Real Scene Peak Brightness
Peak 2% Window
Peak 10% Window
Peak 25% Window
Peak 50% Window
Peak 100% Window
Sustained 2% Window
Sustained 10% Window
Sustained 25% Window
Sustained 50% Window
Sustained 100% Window
Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)
Update 09/28/2023: The peak brightness of the TV changed after a recent firmware update. The TV is now much dimmer in SDR.
The Samsung S95B has adequate peak brightness in SDR. It's bright enough to overcome glare in bright rooms, but sadly, large, bright scenes are dimmed considerably by the TV's Automatic Brightness Limiter (ABL). This is mainly distracting when watching sports with bright playing surfaces, like hockey. Setting Peak Brightness to 'Off' effectively disables the ABL feature, but also reduces the peak brightness in all scenes.
These measurements are taken after calibration, and with the following settings:
- Picture Mode: Movie
- Brightness: Max
- Peak Brightness: High
- Color Tone: Warm2
If you want the brightest image possible, switching to the 'Dynamic' Picture Mode, with Contrast Enhancer at 'High', Contrast at 'Max' and the Color Tone set to 'Standard' results in a brighter image.
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LEARN ABOUT SDR BRIGHTNESS
9.4 Picture Quality
Wide Color Gamut
DCI P3 xy
DCI P3 uv
Rec 2020 xy
Rec 2020 uv
The Samsung S95B has an exceptionally wide color gamut. It has full coverage of the DCI-P3 color space used by most current HDR content, including most UHD Blu-rays. It also has excellent coverage of the wider Rec. 2020 color space, much better than the LG G2 OLED, but the tone mapping is a bit off with saturated colors, especially green and cyan. Compared to the Sony A95K OLED, it has worse tone mapping, so the Sony preserves details better, resulting in a more life-like image.
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LEARN ABOUT COLOR GAMUT
9.0 Picture Quality
1,000 cd/m² DCI P3 Coverage ITP
10,000 cd/m² Rec 2020 Coverage ITP
White Luminance
Red Luminance
Green Luminance
Blue Luminance
Cyan Luminance
Magenta Luminance
Yellow Luminance
The Samsung S95B TV has remarkable color volume. Colors are significantly brighter than white OLED panels, like the LG G2 OLED, and they're very close to the same brightness as pure white. The normalized color volume is better than most TVs on the market, but the absolute color volume is still better on many high-end TVs with LED backlights, like the Samsung QN90B QLED, as colors are even brighter. If you want a similar TV with better color volume, check out the Samsung S95D OLED.
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LEARN ABOUT COLOR VOLUME
9.0 Picture Quality
White Balance dE
Color dE
Gamma
Color Temperature
Picture Mode
Color Temp Setting
Gamma Setting
The Samsung S95B has superb accuracy in SDR nearly out of the box. Gamma is close to the 2.2 target for a dark room, but some scenes are a bit too bright. The white balance is excellent, and the color accuracy is fantastic, with no noticeable issues. The color temperature is nearly perfect as well.
We also measured 'Filmmaker Mode', since it's very popular for movie lovers looking for an accurate image. It's slightly more accurate overall, but most settings are locked, so we used 'Movie' mode instead. You can see the Filmmaker results below:
- White Balance dE: 1.84
- Color dE: 0.97
- Color Temp: 6508K
- Avg. Gamma: 2.13
Finally, we measured the accuracy out of the box using Samsung's default BT.1886 gamma setting. It performs a bit worse overall relative to the calibration targets we chose, but some people prefer BT.1886 over a flat 2.2 or 2.4 gamma curve.
- White Balance dE: 1.66
- Color dE: 2.22
- Color Temp: 6497K
- Avg. Gamma: 2.32
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LEARN ABOUT PRE CALIBRATION
9.5 Picture Quality
White Balance dE
Color dE
Gamma
Color Temperature
White Balance Calibration
Color Calibration
After calibrating the Samsung S95B to a D65 white point, it has fantastic accuracy. Colors, the white balance, and gamma are all nearly perfect, with no noticeable issues in any of them.
Since this TV uses RGB subpixels with an extremely precise spectral power distribution (SPD), we also took measurements with the Judd alternate white point as well. We use a Colorimetry Research CR-250 spectroradiometer as part of our calibration process, creating a profile for each TV that exactly matches the SPD of the TV we're calibrating. Because of this, the results of the alternate white point are extremely similar to the D65 white point we normally use. Visually, there's almost no difference between them, but some people may prefer the Judd white point.
Pre-Cal | Post-Cal | |
---|---|---|
White Balance dE | 1.68 | 0.23 |
Color dE | 1.07 | 1.00 |
Gamma | 2.15 | 2.19 |
Color Temperature | 6414K | 6549K |
You can see our recommended settings here.
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LEARN ABOUT POST CALIBRATION
8.7 Picture Quality
50% Std. Dev.
50% DSE
5% Std. Dev.
5% DSE
The TV has excellent gray uniformity. There's very little variation in brightness across the screen, and there's almost no distracting dirty screen effect in the center, which is great for sports fans. Like all OLED panels, there are thin vertical lines in near-dark scenes, and they're a bit more noticeable than on similar OLEDs like the LG C2 OLED. There's also a noticeable Venetian blind effect in darker scenes. It's mainly noticeable in 10% and 20% gray slides, but it's generally not noticeable with real content.
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LEARN ABOUT GRAY UNIFORMITY
10 Picture Quality
Std. Dev.
Native Std. Dev.
Since OLEDs can turn off individual pixels, the Samsung S95B has perfect black uniformity, and there's no blooming or haloing around bright objects.
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LEARN ABOUT BLACK UNIFORMITY
10 Picture Quality
Color Washout
Color Shift
Brightness Loss
Black Level Raise
Gamma Shift
The TV has an exceptionally wide viewing angle. Although it's close to perfect, the image fades slightly at extremely wide angles. In practice, you can move around the TV and see an accurate image at almost any angle.
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LEARN ABOUT VIEWING ANGLE
9.5 Picture Quality
Screen Finish
Total Reflections
Indirect Reflections
Calculated Direct Reflections
The TV handles direct reflections incredibly well, but there are some flaws. Due to the lack of a polarizer, if you're in a room with any ambient lighting, the TV has a pink tint to it even when it's off. Bright lights are still distracting in a bright room, but it cuts the mirror effect slightly better than the LG G2 OLED. On the other hand, blacks look much better on the G2 when you're in a room with any ambient light. We took a few additional comparison shots so you can see how the Samsung S95B (Right) compares to the LG G2 OLED (Left):
- Comparison 1
- Comparison 2
- Comparison 3
- Comparison 4
- Comparison 5
- Comparison 6
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LEARN ABOUT REFLECTIONS
9.3 Picture Quality
100% Black to 50% Gray 8.0
50% Gray to 100% White 10
100% Black to 50% Red 10
50% Red to 100% Red 10
100% Black to 50% Green 10
50% Green to 100% Green 8.0
100% Black to 50% Blue 10
50% Blue to 100% Blue 8.0
The TV has superb gradient handling in HDR. There's some barely noticeable banding in dark grays, and in bright greens and blues, but you have to look hard to see them. Other color gradients look fantastic.
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LEARN ABOUT HDR NATIVE GRADIENT
6.8 Picture Quality
Smoothing 6.0
Detail Preservation
This TV's low-quality content smoothing is alright. It can't smooth out macro blocking very well, so it's very noticeable in dark scenes. Fine details are preserved very well.
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7.5 Picture Quality
The TV has good sharpness processing with low-resolution or low-bitrate content. Some small details are lost, but the image is upscaled well overall.
Sharpness processing was calibrated for low-resolution or low-bitrate content, with no over-sharpening, with the following settings:
- Sharpness: 5
- Picture Clarity: Off
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LEARN ABOUT UPSCALING: SHARPNESS PROCESSING
Picture Quality
Subpixel Layout
Type OLED
Sub-Type
The TV uses a unique subpixel structure. Instead of having all three subpixels in a row, each pixel forms a triangle, with the larger green subpixel at the top. This isn't really noticeable with most video content, but it's an issue if you're using the TV as a PC monitor. Text has just okay clarity from a PC, as Windows ClearType settings aren't designed for this subpixel structure, and can't correct for it. You can see a few examples below:
- ClearType On
- ClearType Off
- Color fringing
- Contrast modulation
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9.8 Motion
80% Response Time
100% Response Time
The TV has a nearly instantaneous pixel response time, so fast motion is incredibly clear, with almost no blur behind fast-moving objects, and no overshoot artifacts like inverse ghosting. Due to the sample-and-hold nature of OLED technology, there's still some noticeable persistence blur.
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LEARN ABOUT RESPONSE TIME
10 Motion
Flicker-Free
PWM Dimming Frequency
The Samsung S95B isn't technically flicker-free, as there's a small decrease in brightness that corresponds with the refresh cycle of the display. This is very different from pulse width modulation flicker (PWM) on TVs with LED backlights, and it's not noticeable. This dip isn't even always there, and the display is flicker-free in the following modes:
- PC Mode: only with the brightness at max
- Dynamic Mode: brightness above 20
- Standard Mode: brightness above 48
- Game Mode: brightness above 25
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LEARN ABOUT FLICKER-FREE
Motion
Optional BFI
Min Flicker For 60 fps
60Hz For 60 fps
120Hz For 120 fps
Min Flicker for 60 fps in Game Mode
The Samsung S95B OLED TV has an optional black frame insertion feature (BFI) that reduces the appearance of persistence blur caused by the TV's nearly instantaneous pixel response time. Like the other 2022 OLED TVs, including the LG C2 OLED, it can only flicker at 60Hz, even when displaying a 120Hz signal.
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LEARN ABOUT BLACK FRAME INSERTION (BFI)
Motion
Motion Interpolation (30 fps)
Motion Interpolation (60 fps)
The TV has an optional motion interpolation feature, and it works well with most real content. There are noticeable motion artifacts in really busy scenes with the Blur Reduction and Judder Reduction sliders both at '10', but it looks good in simpler scenes.
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LEARN ABOUT MOTION INTERPOLATION
5.3 Motion
Frame Hold Time @ 24 fps
Frame Hold Time @ 60 fps
Unfortunately, due to the nearly instantaneous pixel response time of the Samsung S95B OLED, there's a noticeable stutter with low frame rate content. It's especially noticeable in panning shots. The black frame insertion feature and the motion interpolation feature can both help reduce the appearance of stutter, but they both have their drawbacks.
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LEARN ABOUT STUTTER
10 Motion
Judder-Free 24p
Judder-Free 24p via 60p
Judder-Free 24p via 60i
Judder-Free 24p via Native Apps
The TV can almost always remove judder when watching 24p movies or TV shows, even from sources that can only send a 60Hz signal, like a cable box. Sadly, because the black frame insertion (BFI) feature can only flicker at 60Hz on this TV, movies aren't judder-free when BFI is enabled.
Without enabling additional motion interpolation settings, it's only judder-free in the 'Movie' and 'FILMMAKER' modes. There's judder in all other modes, including 'Standard', but you can reduce it by setting Picture Clarity to 'Custom', with both sliders set to '0'.
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LEARN ABOUT 24P JUDDER
9.4 Motion
Native Refresh Rate
Variable Refresh Rate
HDMI Forum VRR
FreeSync
G-SYNC Compatible
4k VRR Maximum
4k VRR Minimum
1080p VRR Maximum
1080p VRR Minimum
1440p VRR Maximum
1440p VRR Minimum
VRR + Local Dimming No Local Dimming
The Samsung S95B supports all current variable refresh rate formats, ensuring a nearly tear-free gaming experience from any source that supports VRR. The VRR feature works across a very wide range of refresh rates. Below 40Hz, low framerate compensation (LFC) is automatically enabled, so even if your framerate drops very low, you still won't see screen tearing.
Although it's not advertised to support it, multiple owners have confirmed that the Samsung S95B can accept and display a forced 144Hz signal as well, but only with an 8-bit signal. Unfortunately, on our TV it's buggy and doesn't work consistently. The variable refresh rate feature works up to 144Hz but often flashes constantly, and it's not really useable right now on our TV.
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LEARN ABOUT VARIABLE REFRESH RATE
9.7 Inputs
1080p @ 60Hz
1080p @ 60Hz Outside Game Mode
1080p @ 120Hz
1080p @ 144Hz
1440p @ 60Hz
1440p @ 120Hz
1440p @ 144Hz
4k @ 60Hz
4k @ 60Hz + 10-Bit HDR
4k @ 60Hz @ 4:4:4
4k @ 60Hz Outside Game Mode
4k @ 60Hz With Interpolation
4k @ 120Hz
4k @ 144Hz
8k @ 60Hz
The Samsung S95B has fantastic low input lag in 'Game' Mode. This ensures your actions are in sync with what you see on screen, giving you a responsive gaming experience. If you're a fan of motion interpolation, Samsung's 'Game Motion Plus' feature allows you to interpolate low frame rate games, improving motion clarity while adding much less input lag than other brands. With the 'Game Motion Plus' settings at max, there's 28.2ms of input lag, which is higher than with the setting disabled, but it's still good for casual gamers.
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LEARN ABOUT INPUT LAG
9.6 Inputs
Resolution 4k
480p @ 59.94Hz (Widescreen)
720p @ 59.94Hz
1080p @ 60Hz @ 4:4:4
1080p @ 120Hz
1080p @ 144Hz
1440p @ 60Hz
1440p @ 120Hz
1440p @ 144Hz
4k @ 60Hz
4k @ 60Hz @ 4:4:4
4k @ 120Hz
4k @ 120Hz @ 4:4:4
4k @ 144Hz
8k @ 30Hz or 24Hz
8k @ 60Hz
The Samsung S95B supports all common resolutions up to 4k @ 120Hz. Except for 1440p @ 120Hz, all supported formats display chroma 4:4:4 signals properly, which is important for text clarity. Unfortunately, even though it can display chroma 4:4:4 properly, text from a PC isn't clear due to the unusual subpixel structure (see the Pixels section of the review for some examples). 4k @ 120Hz signals are displayed properly, with no resolution-halving or other issues.
Although it's not advertised to support it, multiple owners have confirmed that the Samsung S95B can accept and display a forced 144Hz signal as well, but only with an 8-bit signal. Unfortunately, it's buggy on our TV and doesn't work consistently.
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LEARN ABOUT SUPPORTED RESOLUTIONS
Inputs
Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM)
4k @ 120Hz
1440p @ 120Hz
1080p @ 120Hz
HDR
VRR
This TV is fully compatible with everything the PS5 offers, like 1440p @ 120Hz and 4K @ 120Hz, as well as HDMI Forum VRR. It also has four ports supporting HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, which is great if you have multiple HDMI 2.1 consoles or want to connect a PC.
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Inputs
Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM)
4k @ 120Hz
1440p @ 120Hz
1080p @ 120Hz
HDR
VRR
This TV is fully compatible with everything the Xbox Series X|S offers, including 1440p @ 120Hz, 4k @ 120Hz, HDMI Forum VRR, and FreeSync Premium. All four HDMI ports support the full bandwidth of HDMI 2.1, which is great if you have both consoles or a PC you plan on using with the TV.
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Inputs
HDR10
HDR10+
Dolby Vision
HLG
HDMI 2.0 Full Bandwidth
HDMI 2.1 Class Bandwidth
CEC Yes
HDCP 2.2 Yes (HDMI 1,2,3,4)
ATSC Tuner
USB 3.0
Variable Analog Audio Out No
Wi-Fi Support Yes (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz)
The TV supports the full 48Gbps bandwidth of HDMI 2.1 on all four HDMI ports. This is great, as it allows you to connect multiple high-bandwidth devices, like if you have both the PS5 and Xbox Series X. Unfortunately, Samsung still doesn't support Dolby Vision. However, it supports HDR10+ instead, which is very similar overall but not as widely supported.
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Inputs
The Samsung S95's inputs face down and to the sides, and there's a separate cutout for the headphone jack.
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Inputs
HDMI 4
USB 2
Digital Optical Audio Out 1
Analog Audio Out 3.5mm 0
Analog Audio Out RCA 0
Component In 0
Composite In 0
Tuner (Cable/Ant) 1
Ethernet 1
DisplayPort 0
IR In 0
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Inputs
ARC/eARC Port
eARC: Dolby Atmos Over Dolby Digital Plus
eARC: Dolby Digital Plus 7.1
eARC: LPCM 7.1 Over Dolby MAT
eARC: Dolby TrueHD 7.1
eARC: DTS:X Over DTS-HD MA
eARC: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1
eARC: LPCM Channels (Bitstream)
ARC: Dolby Digital 5.1
ARC: DTS 5.1
Optical: Dolby Digital 5.1
Optical: DTS 5.1
The TV supports eARC, allowing it to pass uncompressed high-quality audio from a connected source through to your soundbar or home theater system. Sadly, it doesn't support any DTS formats, which is disappointing, as many UHD Blu-rays use DTS for their lossless audio tracks.
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6.9 Sound Quality
Low-Frequency Extension
Std. Dev. @ 70
Std. Dev. @ 80
Std. Dev. @ Max
Max
Dynamic Range Compression
The TV has an okay frequency response. The low-frequency extension is high, so like most TVs, it can't produce much bass. It gets loud, but there's significant compression and pumping artifacts at max volume. On the other hand, it has a fairly well-balanced sound profile at lower listening levels, resulting in clear dialogue.
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LEARN ABOUT FREQUENCY RESPONSE
7.4 Sound Quality
Weighted THD @ 80
Weighted THD @ Max
IMD @ 80
IMD @ Max
The TV has decent distortion performance overall. There's very little harmonic distortion even at max volume, and there's very little in the treble range, where it's most noticeable.
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LEARN ABOUT DISTORTION
8.5 Smart Features
Smart OS Tizen
Version 2022
Ease of Use
Smoothness
Time Taken to Select YouTube
Time Taken to Change Backlight
Advanced Options
The TV runs the 2022 version of Tizen OS, which is fast and easy to use. The interface now fills the entire screen instead of the bar that appeared on the previous version. It makes it easier to find your favorite content.
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0 Smart Features
Ads
Opt-out
Suggested Content in Home
Opt-out of Suggested Content
Unfortunately, like most TVs on the market, there are ads throughout the interface, and there's no option to disable them completely.
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LEARN ABOUT AD-FREE
8.5 Smart Features
App Selection
App Smoothness
Cast Capable
USB Drive Playback
USB Drive HDR Playback
HDR in Netflix
HDR in YouTube
The included apps cover most of the common streaming services, and there's a great selection of additional apps available in Samsung's app store. It's also compatible with Google Duo, which supports video calls with up to 32 people by connecting a webcam to the TV.
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8.5 Smart Features
Size
Voice Control
CEC Menu Control
Other Smart Features
Remote App Samsung SmartThings
The remote is slim and easy to use but has a limited selection of buttons, so you have to change most things through menus on the TV. There are four quick-access buttons for the most popular streaming services; unfortunately, there's no way to remap these to your favorites. You can recharge the remote via a solar panel on the back or with a USB-C cable (sold separately).
The TV is compatible with multiple voice assistants, including Bixby, Google Assistant, and Alexa, but you have to use the remote as the TV doesn't have a built-in Mic for hands-free controls. Voice controls work well and allow you to launch apps, change inputs, or adjust certain settings.
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Smart Features
The controls are on the bottom bezel of the TV near the center. There's a single button that lets you power the TV on/off and change channels, volume, and inputs.
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Smart Features
- Power cable
- Remote control
- 3.5mm to RCA adapter
- VESA mount spaces
- User guide
—
Smart Features
Power Consumption 113 W
Power Consumption (Max) 242 W
Firmware 1098
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