
Under the xbox one S advanced settings, the Tv showed up with check marks across the board for 4k 60hz 10-bit etc. I played around with turning it on and off, and all I can say is "wow". As others have said, HDR makes a significant difference. Ive tried uncharted 4 on a PS4 Pro and GeoW 4 on an X1s. So a little behind Samsung, but still an acceptable figure. I got a Sony XBR55X700D today, and i can confirm it works in 4k HDR with both the xbox one S and PS4 Pro after the latest system updates (although you have to use HDMI 2 and 3).Įdit: this tv has 32ms lag with 4k and HDR turned on. I've shared this in another thread but I think it is relevant here as well: The standard port I did 10 tests and got the average, I had to reduce the 2.0 port to 5 tests because it was so frustrating as I kept getting negative frames (Pressing too early) Laptop plugged into HDMI Port 5 (4K60hz HDMI 2.0)īest result I've gotten during these tests, obviously on HDMI 2.0 port. Laptop plugged into HDMI Port 2 (Standard 1.4 with HDCP 2.2) I already had a VERY noticeable difference to the naked eye and feeling of the controller, using a standard port felt like I was sliding on butter, but I decided to plug in my laptop, outputted at 1080p60hz and used a Sega Genesis ROM of 240p Test Suite on Kega Fusion (Genesis emulators always had very good input response) My TV's manual said to have the lowest input lag, use a game system on that port with Game Mode enabled. My TV has 5 HDMI ports, 1 and 2 are standard with HDCP 2.2, 3 and 4 just standard, port 5 is HDMI 2.0 with HDCP 2.2.

I don't know if other TV's are like this, but if you have a UHD TV already, I HIGHLY recommend using all devices on the port using a splitter.

Cost me $750 refurbished on Amazon after tax. Thought I'd bump this, but here's something I highly recommend checking out, especially for current UHD owners.
