Vizio’s 2018 4K TV lineup includes its brightest, most colorful set ever

Vizio’s 2018 4K TV lineup includes its brightest, most colorful set ever

6 years ago
Anonymous $CLwNLde341

https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2018/4/10/17216688/vizio-2018-4k-tv-p-series-quantum-m-series-pricing-features-release-date

Vizio announced new revisions of its entire consumer 4K TV lineup today, with the latest waves of the P-Series, M-Series, D-Series, and E-Series set to arrive in stores over the next several weeks. And if you visit the company’s website today, you’ll notice that Vizio is again referring to these devices as TVs — not just “displays” — because they all once again have TV tuners and coax inputs built-in.

At the top of the 2018 family is an entirely new flagship, the P-Series Quantum. Available only in a 65-inch model, the P-Series Quantum is the company’s brightest TV yet and reaches peak brightness of 2,000 nits. That should make things like fire, explosions, and other HDR goodness really pop to the point where you might need to look away from the screen. For context, the old P-Series topped out above 500 nits in some HDR scenes.

Vizio’s 2018 4K TV lineup includes its brightest, most colorful set ever

Apr 10, 2018, 12:22pm UTC
https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2018/4/10/17216688/vizio-2018-4k-tv-p-series-quantum-m-series-pricing-features-release-date >Vizio announced new revisions of its entire consumer 4K TV lineup today, with the latest waves of the P-Series, M-Series, D-Series, and E-Series set to arrive in stores over the next several weeks. And if you visit the company’s website today, you’ll notice that Vizio is again referring to these devices as TVs — not just “displays” — because they all once again have TV tuners and coax inputs built-in. >At the top of the 2018 family is an entirely new flagship, the P-Series Quantum. Available only in a 65-inch model, the P-Series Quantum is the company’s brightest TV yet and reaches peak brightness of 2,000 nits. That should make things like fire, explosions, and other HDR goodness really pop to the point where you might need to look away from the screen. For context, the old P-Series topped out above 500 nits in some HDR scenes.