Completely unique and innovative design, Sounds very good by flatscreen standards, Typical OLED black performance, More punch and vibrancy than from an LG, Spot-on motion, colour and sharpness,
Still no Dolby Vision, Only two HDMIs can handle full-fat 4K HDR, The user-experience could do with improvements, LG does standard-def better,
We loved the Sony A1 in its 55in guise, and the 65in version is more of the same. This is precisely the kind of picture that's only enhanced as it gets bigger.Of course, the price increases with the screen size - £4500 is a huge amount to spend on a telly...
Published: 2017-08-16, Author: Adam , review by: pcworld.co.nz
Exquisite picture quality, Dolby Vision, Android TV
More expensive than entry-level OLED rivals, Unusual design, Underwhelming built-in subwoofer
With the A1 Sony has delivered the stunning picture quality that we've come to expect from Ultra HD OLED. If you're only chasing picture quality then you'll find cheaper entry-level OLEDs elsewhere, but if the A1's bold design, impressive audio and slick...
Deep blacks, Excellent 4K performance without motion lag, Supports HDR-10 and Dolby Vision, Lots of input and connectivity options
The table stand tilts the screen upwards, Uninspired IR remote,
With the KD-65A1, Sony has presented its vision of a flagship consumer TV, and it can handle anything that you throw at it. Video quality is extraordinary, no matter what media you throw at it, and its support for both HDR-10 as well as Dolby Vision makes...
Published: 2017-10-02, Author: Ali , review by: bgr.in
Sony, alongside Samsung and LG, today sits on top of the television game. With a firm focus on quality over economization, the Japanese brand strives first to build good TVs, and then make them affordable. It's a reputation that the company has built and...
Published: 2017-01-10, Author: Robert , review by: stuff.tv/my/
Stunning picture performance, Clever and unique design, Really decent TV sound, Wide viewing angles
Android TV is sluggish and uninspiring, Design requires a wide TV rack to support it
With LG's OLED reign having gone unchallenged over the past few years, we're glad to see Sony's Bravia A1 come in with some serious competition. Not only does this OLED look the business, but its Acoustic Surface tech is something completely new and compl...
Abstract: The Bravia A1 series is Sony's first large-screen OLED TV. A 4K UHD TV that supports HDR10, Dolby Vision, and Hybrid Log-Gamma HDR formats, the A1 also touts a new X1 Extreme processor with tons of horsepower to handle all the real-time processing (e.g...