Sony 65 Inch OLED 4K Ultra HD TV BRAVIA 8 Smart Google TV with Dolby Vision HDR and Exclusive Features for PlayStation 5 (K-65XR80), 2024 Model BRAVIA Theater Quad
Original price was: $4,999.98.$4,096.00Current price is: $4,096.00.
Price: $4,999.98 - $4,096.00
(as of Nov 09, 2024 18:13:08 UTC – Details)
Sony is a creative entertainment company with a portfolio that encompasses electronics, music, motion pictures, mobile, gaming, and more.
MINI LED BRIGHTNESS AND CONTRAST: Thousands of Mini LEDs are precisely controlled by XR Backlight Master Drive to deliver authentic contrast and our brightest ever 4K TV.
BILLIONS OF REAL-WORLD QLED COLORS: Access billions of accurate real-world colors with QLED technology and XR Triluminos Pro.
POWERFUL TV PROCESSING: XR Processor intelligently enhances every scene in real-time boosting color, contrast, and clarity.
UNLEASH THE FULL POTENTIAL OF SURROUND SOUND: Hear cinema-style surround sound all around you with 360 Spatial Sound Mapping.
ROOM OPTIMIZED SOUND: Sound is auto calibrated to your room’s characteristics with Sound Field Optimization.
SOUND STRAIGHT FROM CINEMA: Supports industry-standard formats including Dolby Atmos, DTS:X, and IMAX Enhanced.
Customers say
Customers like the picture quality, ease of setup, and sound quality of the television. They mention it’s vibrant, crisp, clear, and natural. Some appreciate the easy integration with legacy peripherals. However, some customers have mixed opinions on the overall quality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
11 reviews for Sony 65 Inch OLED 4K Ultra HD TV BRAVIA 8 Smart Google TV with Dolby Vision HDR and Exclusive Features for PlayStation 5 (K-65XR80), 2024 Model BRAVIA Theater Quad
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![Sony 65 Inch OLED 4K Ultra HD TV BRAVIA 8 Smart Google TV with Dolby Vision HDR and Exclusive Features for PlayStation 5 (K-65XR80), 2024 Model BRAVIA Theater Quad Sony 65 Inch OLED 4K Ultra HD TV BRAVIA 8 Smart Google TV with Dolby Vision HDR and Exclusive Features for PlayStation 5 (K-65XR80), 2024 Model BRAVIA Theater Quad](https://i0.wp.com/m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81pd6FupFSL._AC_SL1500_.jpg?w=1500&resize=1500,1192&ssl=1)
Original price was: $4,999.98.$4,096.00Current price is: $4,096.00.
Jim –
Great Picture and Sound But…
I have never purchased a television that wasn’t from a big box retailer. Researched and this was the best size and reviews for my needs. Amazon delivered quickly and were nice enough to not just leave it on my porch. It was easy to unbox and set up thanks to a You Tube video. I couldn’t set up Google TV so had to call and Sony had to update it. I decided to just keep it as standard TV since I have cable and a few streamers that were directly on the remote. I also had to adjust the picture to Vivid and adjust the blackness on the picture but that was easy to do. 55″ was the right size as I was replacing a 14 year old Sony 46″. Sony seems to have the best picture quality, find others way too vibrant and unnatural. The sound is also quite good on this set. I would recommend it as a good tv especially since I went by reviews only and did not see it in store. The picture is vibrant and looks so crisp, clear and natural. Amazon delivered!
Isaiah –
Best Tv Iâve Ever Had
This tv is great, I used it a lot to play games in my PS5 with 120hz and I love it. The remotes allows you to use the remote to sign into your account and before getting your ps5 controller which I thought was pretty cool. I also love the quality of this tv itâs very high tier and very much with the money!
Jeb Baker –
Excellent Picture Quality!
This TV is highly underrated. The picture quality is excellent, with top-notch brightness and exceptional color accuracy. I primarily use it for streaming and watching sports via satellite. The refresh rate is fast, the brightness is impressive, and the color quality is outstanding. Overall, I’m very happy with this TV!
Kenny –
Beautiful picture.
Overall watching and gamming on this is amazing. Some functions could be better. Have to reset the tv to get volume to work or reseting the remote to get it to work. But besides that. Pretty solid
Mr. G –
Good quality and value overall, easy integration with legacy peripherals
This Sony Bravia 8 replaced a 10 year old Samsung UHD, which had begun displaying backlight issues. No issues with product quality, and setup walkthrough was quite easy, connecting an older model Sony HT-XT1 soundbar, DVR, Samsung blu-ray, and VCR. Brightness initially seemed weak in standard and professional modes, but adjusting the setting to âvividâ cured that. We were initially planning to purchase a Sony QD-OLED model, but the $1500 savings on purchase of this Bravia model was too compelling to ignore. No regrets!
John W –
Defective Out Of The Box
I was unable to set up the TV, as it would not go any further than the welcome page. Called Sony Tech Support on 9/8/24. The rep did not have me try anything on the TV itself, just the remote and attributed my issue with the remote. He ordered another one and I received it today, 9/11/24. Same problem. Called Sony again and it was immediately escalated to a tech supervisor. He had me go through multiple steps on the remote as well as the TV. He also did some further investigation regarding the remote and found no issues that would cause the problem, after which he determined that it was a defect in the TV. He then told me he could order the part to correct the issue, which would indicate that this problem was found in Sony’s system. How else would he know which part to order? I’m not having a repairman tear the brand new TV apart to fix the problem. Will be returning the TV. I will say that Sony’s customer service seems to be good, and have read many reviews about other TV manufacturers’ being terrible. Still not going to re-order a Sony.
DM –
Great product
Picture quality is awesome!
Mark –
What a picture!!!
As technology keeps changing it really gets mind blowing until the next generation lol. I remember old skool 4×3 analog TV and then HD came around and the wow factor hit! Now my last TV was nice, but not this nice. I thought my HD experience was great until this, poof mind blown again! So far so good but prepare yourself for the set up period. Take your time to review options that make sense to you and set this Ferrari of a TV up for the thrill ride you will enjoy daily! I only had to add one app, really easy to do, and of course enter passwords lol hate that part!
Joestyle –
ð¤ð¼
DanyDaniel –
Jamás habÃa tenido una pantalla oled, es vdad lo que dicen, es la mejor forma de ver pelÃculas, la imagen que subà no le hace justicia, llevo una semana con ella y no he dejado de ver pelis o jugar PS5, la cuÃdare como se debe, vale cads peso gastado ðð»
fung0 –
The Bravia 8 was a replacement for a 16-year-old Sharp 52-inch, which abruptly perished on night. With that large leap in technology, the improvement in visuals was breathtaking. Sony’s build quality is impressive as well. This was a great purchase.However… I do have a few general industry-wide caveats, which are the reason I can’t honestly give my Bravia 8 the full 5 stars it would otherwise easily qualify for.* The Bravia 8 doesn’t get along with the rest of my system as well as the ancient Sharp it replaced. I’m sure this isn’t a Sony thing, nor a Bravia 8 thing. It’s the move toward ever-‘smarter’ components – each of which wants to run things it’s own way. Going through the inevitable ‘control my other devices’ setup only makes the conflicts worse – I wish there was a setting to tell all the devices to just mind their own business. I’d still be using four remotes, but at least I wouldn’t have my control inputs being constantly over-ridden.* Along with the uppity built-in smarts, there’s a serious dearth of available technical over-rides and read-outs. For instance, I’ve got a PC hooked up, and it’s hit or miss whether the TV will recognize the correct resolution – and there’s no manual setting to brute-force the resolution. At the same time, while my cable (IPTV) box is delivering a superb image, there’s no way to confirm that it and the TV are in fact doing the promised 4K, or just getting by on really good 1080p – and, again, no easy way to enforce that outcome.* The TV really wants individual HDMI devices to be plugged directly into it. And yet, after a full agonizing day, I was unable to get Audio Return Channel working – either via HDMI or optical connection – to provide full surround sound through my receiver. So I wasted another sweaty hour putting things back the way they were in the first place – everything plugged into the receiver, with a single HDMI connection to the TV. That setup is still quirky and mysterious (as much the fault of the receiver as the TV), but nonetheless, things feel a lot more rational this way.* On the positive side, the TV has not been overbearing about Internet connectivity. I get an occasional warning popup to the effect that my Ethernet cable is disconnected, and so far that’s it. On the negative side, I did need to enable GoogleTV at least once for the purposes of configuration (see next point). But back on the positive side, GoogleTV is quite functional, and obviously benefits from Google’s extensive Android experience. If my TV simply *must* have an OS, I guess it’s just as well to have a good one.* In order to properly set up the picture, I needed to run a professional calibration app in GoogleTV – this instantly enabled a full range of picture settings in the Bravia on-screen menus. Having worked in computers and consumer electronics for decades, I do not enjoy being ‘protected’ from using my lifetime of know-how. The full settings could be disabled by default, yet made safely accessible behind a simple warning message.* Accessing the full settings is important, because even in Professional mode I found the image drastically over-saturated. Once I’d turned the saturation down (and boosted the gamma very slightly to compensate for the fact that I run at low brightness), the image became astonishingly life-like. Watching talk-shows and the like, I often feel that the presenters are in the room with me.Bottom line: Bravia 8 – full marks, it’s a terrific TV. The OLED blacks are miraculous, the color gamut is gorgeous, and even older DVD-quality content looks better than ever before. Consumer industry: continuing failing grade, you need to wise up a bit!