Samsung S95D QD-OLED
4× HDMI 2.1
Xbox Series X supports 4K/120, VRR, ALLM and Dolby Vision gaming across a large library. A matching TV needs HDMI 2.1, native 120 Hz and Dolby Vision Game mode to unlock every feature.
4× HDMI 2.1
2× HDMI 2.1
4× HDMI 2.1
4× HDMI 2.1
4× HDMI 2.1
| Model | Tech | Size | Peak nits | HDMI 2.1 | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samsung S95D QD-OLED | QD-OLED | 65″ | 1800 | 4× | $2,799 |
| Sony Bravia A95L QD-OLED | QD-OLED | 65″ | 1500 | 2× | $3,499 |
| LG OLED B4 | OLED | 65″ | 700 | 4× | $1,299 |
| LG OLED C6 | OLED | 65″ | 1000 | 4× | $2,199 |
| LG OLED G6 Gallery | OLED | 77″ | 1500 | 4× | $4,499 |
The ranking below prioritises 4k/120 hdmi 2.1, dolby vision gaming, freesync premium. Every pick is checked against the dim-lighting profile and the gaming usage pattern this scenario implies. Gaming picks are HDMI 2.1 only — no 60 Hz LCDs slip through.
Why this matters: a TV that scores 9/10 for movies in a dark room can be a 5/10 for sports in a sunny living room. Recommendation lists that ignore context inevitably push the same three OLEDs at everyone. This list doesn't.
The comfortable range for Xbox Series X is 55–85 inches, depending on how far your seating sits from the screen.
A dark or dim room is OLED and QD-OLED territory — perfect blacks matter more than peak brightness when there's no ambient light to fight.
Yes — for 4K/120, VRR and ALLM on current consoles and GPUs, HDMI 2.1 is required. Every pick in this list has it.
Every recommendation combines your viewing distance, room lighting, primary use and budget. Sizes come from THX and SMPTE field-of-view standards; technology ranking uses documented panel behaviour in each lighting condition.
Availability and pricing vary by market. Use the market selector on the TV Decision Assistant to see the exact models sold locally and current retailer offers.
Run the TV Sizer calculator for a distance-based size recommendation, then use the assistant for a model shortlist tuned to your lighting, budget and use case.