Samsung Q6F QN65Q6FAAFXZC 65"
100% colour volume with QLED and HDR delivers vibrant, accurate colours, and Motion Xcelerator smooths 60Hz action. Built-in Tizen, Alexa, and Google Assistant make it a strong smart home hub, complemented by balanced 20W audio. It’s best for streaming-focused households and smart home users prioritizing picture quality over gaming.
About This TV
100% colour volume with QLED and HDR delivers vibrant, accurate colours, and Motion Xcelerator smooths 60Hz action. Built-in Tizen, Alexa, and Google Assistant make it a strong smart home hub, complemented by balanced 20W audio. It’s best for streaming-focused households and smart home users prioritizing picture quality over gaming.
- Screen size 65
- Resolution 3840x2160
- Panel type QLED
- Refresh rate 60
- HDR HDR
- Smart platform Tizen
The 30-Second Version
The Samsung Q6F is a bright, colorful 65-inch TV that's easy to use, but its gaming and HDR performance are weak spots. If you just want a big screen for Netflix and sports in a well-lit room, it's a good buy—especially near the $500 mark. Skip it if you need 120Hz gaming or deep, cinematic blacks.
Overview
The Samsung Q6F is a 65-inch 4K QLED TV that gets the basics right if you just want a big, bright screen for everyday streaming. Its 100% color volume and Motion Xcelerator handling make Netflix binges and sports look lively, especially in a sunlit room. But this isn't a TV for home theater nerds or serious gamers. Under the hood, the picture processing and HDR fall behind what competitors offer at similar prices, so while it's fine for casual use, it won't wow you with cinematic depth.
Samsung leaned hard into the smart home angle here, and the Tizen platform is snappy and well-stocked with apps. Alexa and Google Assistant built right in, so yelling at your TV works as expected. The design is slim and unassuming, though the plastic build reminds you this is a budget-focused QLED. For the price, it's a functional giant that fits right into a family room.
Performance
Our benchmark database puts the Q6F's display in the 85th percentile, which sounds great until you dig deeper. That high rank mostly comes from sheer size and resolution—65 inches of 4K is sweet—but actual picture quality lands at a mediocre 36th percentile. Colors are vibrant and bright, but HDR performance is just average, and you won't get the deep blacks or nuanced highlights of a good OLED or even a higher-tier QLED. Motion is smooth enough for cable TV thanks to the 60Hz panel and Motion Xcelerator, but gaming feels sluggish and lacks VRR support. Audio is another letdown: 20W speakers sound thin and tinny, so budget for a soundbar. Connectivity is fine with three HDMI ports, but only one USB feels stingy.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Vivid QLED colors pop in bright rooms. 85th
- Tizen smart platform is snappy and well-organized. 78th
- Giant 65-inch screen makes movies feel immersive. 70th
- Design is slim and blends in easily.
Cons
- Gaming performance is lackluster with only 60Hz. 13th
- Built-in speakers sound thin and lack punch. 17th
- HDR performance falls flat compared to rivals. 35th
- Picture quality overall is just average for the price.
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Display
| Size | 65" |
| Resolution | 4K |
| Panel Type | QLED |
| Curved | No |
Picture Quality
| Color Gamut | 100% colour volume |
| Motion Tech | Motion Xcelerator |
HDR
| HDR Formats | HDR |
Gaming
| Refresh Rate | 60 Hz |
Smart TV
| Platform | Tizen |
| Voice Assistant | Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant |
| Works With | Yes |
Audio
| Wattage | 20 |
Connectivity
| HDMI Ports | 3 |
| USB Ports | 1 |
| Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi |
| Ethernet | Yes |
| VESA Mount | 200 mm x 200 mm |
Value & Pricing
Price varies pretty wildly from $500 to $750 across vendors, so shop around. At the low end, it's a decent deal for a name-brand 65-inch QLED that handles bright-room streaming well. But once you creep toward $700, you're in Hisense U7 territory, which offers far better gaming chops and more advanced HDR. If you can snag it closer to $500, the Q6F makes a solid second TV for a bedroom or living room that gets a lot of natural light.
Price History
vs Competition
Stacked against direct competitors, the Q6F holds its own only in size and smart features. The Hisense U7 Series also comes in 65 inches and typically packs Mini-LED backlighting, a 120Hz panel, and superior gaming features for similar money—so it's a much stronger overall pick. If you can downsize to 55 inches, the LG C5 OLED blows the Q6F out of the water with perfect blacks and infinite contrast, though you'll pay more. The TCL QM8K, a 75-inch monster, is in another league entirely for big-screen enthusiasts, while the Roku Plus Series trades Samsung's Tizen for a simpler, ad-light Roku interface at a lower cost but with a smaller screen.
| Spec | Samsung Q6F QN65Q6FAAFXZC 65" | Sony BRAVIA 5 K55XR50 | LG C5 Series OLED55C5PUA | Hisense U8 Series 75U8QG | TCL QM8K Series 75QM8K | Roku Plus Series 4K QLED Mini-LED 55" Class Smart RokuTV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screen Size | 65 | 55 | 55 | 75 | 75 | 55 |
| Resolution | 3840x2160 | 3840x2160 | 3840x2160 | 3840x2160 | 4K | 3840x2160 |
| Panel Type | QLED | MiniLED | OLED | QLED | MiniLED | Mini-LED QLED |
| Refresh Rate | 60 | 120 | 144 | 165 | 144 | 60 |
| Hdr | HDR | Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG | Dolby Vision, HDR10 | Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) | Dolby Vision, HDR 10, HDR 10+, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) | Dolby Vision, HDR10+, HLG |
| Smart Platform | Tizen | Google TV | webOS | Google TV | Google TV | Roku TV |
| Dolby Vision | - | true | true | true | true | true |
| Dolby Atmos | - | true | true | true | true | true |
| Hdmi Version | - | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 2.1 |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Hdr | Audio | Smart | Gaming | Display | Connectivity | Social Proof | Picture Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samsung Q6F QN65Q6FAAFXZC 65" | 34.6 | 13.1 | 70.2 | 17.1 | 84.8 | 45.1 | 78.1 | 36.8 |
| Sony BRAVIA 5 K55XR50 Compare | 97 | 92.3 | 91.3 | 78.8 | 67 | 93.9 | 89.3 | 93.6 |
| LG C5 Series OLED55C5PUA Compare | 86.1 | 99.9 | 65.7 | 99.9 | 89.3 | 92.5 | 98.1 | 88.5 |
| Hisense U8 Series 75U8QG Compare | 90.9 | 98.3 | 96 | 95.4 | 87.8 | 87 | 89.3 | 98.7 |
| TCL QM8K Series 75QM8K Compare | 90.9 | 92.3 | 99 | 93.8 | 35.9 | 93.9 | 98.1 | 99.3 |
| Roku Plus Series 4K QLED Mini-LED 55" Class Smart RokuTV Compare | 95.2 | 81.5 | 86.4 | 56.7 | 85.9 | 79.6 | 94.1 | 74.2 |
Common Questions
Q: Does this TV have good picture quality in dark rooms?
Not really. It gets bright enough for daytime viewing, but HDR and black levels are only average, so dark-room movie watching won't impress.
Q: Is the Samsung Q6F good for gaming with a PS5?
It's limited to 60Hz and lacks gaming features like VRR or ALLM, so serious gamers will feel the lag. A TV with a 120Hz panel would be much better.
Q: Can this TV be wall mounted?
Yes, it uses a standard VESA 200x200 mount, so any compatible bracket will work.
Who Should Skip This
Serious gamers who need 120Hz and VRR should steer clear, as should home theater fans craving deep blacks and cinematic HDR—the Q6F's picture is more 'good enough' than spectacular. If you want a truly premium picture, an OLED like the LG C5 delivers, though you'll sacrifice some screen size at the same price.
Verdict
The Samsung Q6F is for people who want a no-fuss, large 4K TV for bright living rooms and don't care about gaming or cinematic HDR. It's a solid pick if you mostly watch sports, YouTube, and casual Netflix sessions where screen size and color pop matter more than perfect black levels. Just don't expect it to pull double duty as a gaming monitor or a home theater centerpiece.