The LG QNED92A occupies a narrow niche on this list: a genuinely capable gaming connectivity spec and reliable off-angle picture quality bundled with the weakest core mini-LED performance of any flagship-priced TV here. Independent measurement found 1,450 nits on a 10% window, dropping to 770 nits full-screen — the lowest brightness of any non-budget entry on this list, well behind the roughly 2,086 measured nits of a Samsung QN90F that actually costs $400 less. Its dimming zone count is even more telling: a 27-by-18 backlight grid measurement puts it at just 486 zones, the fewest of any TV on this entire list — fewer even than the budget-tier QM6K's roughly 500 — which is why Tom's Guide concluded flatly that it 'can't hold a candle to TCL and Hisense' on value. What the QNED92A does offer, and offers well, is connectivity and viewing-angle consistency. Four full HDMI 2.1 ports support 4K at 120 to 144Hz with VRR, and broad G-Sync and FreeSync compatibility make it a genuinely strong PC-gaming companion — on paper, matching the Samsung QN90F's port count, if not its refresh ceiling or overall picture quality. LG's panel technology also retains color and contrast better than most rivals here when viewed from the side, a real advantage for wide seating arrangements where the TCL and Hisense mini-LED panels can lose punch off-axis. Dolby Vision support is present, which the cheaper Samsung QN90F lacks, though the QNED92A gives up HDR10+ in return. At $1,799 through LG.com (a widely-cited $798 Walmart figure could not be independently verified and shouldn't be assumed available), the QNED92A asks flagship-adjacent money for a TV whose core contrast and brightness numbers trail nearly everything else on this list. It's best suited to LG-ecosystem households prioritizing webOS integration and wide-seating consistency over outright picture punch.
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