🎮 Elevate Your Game with LG OLED – Where Every Pixel Pops!
The LGG3 Series 77-Inch Class OLED evo 4K Processor Smart Flat Screen TV is designed for the ultimate viewing experience. Featuring the advanced a9 AI Processor Gen6, it delivers stunning picture quality with up to 70% brighter images. The TV's sleek One Wall Design integrates seamlessly into your home, while Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos provide an immersive audio-visual experience. With webOS 23, enjoy easy access to over 300 free channels and a 5-year panel warranty for peace of mind.
Brand Name | LG |
Item Weight | 94.4 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 1 x 67.4 x 38.4 inches |
Item model number | OLED77G3PUA |
Special Features | AI Picture, AI Upscaling, FILMMAKER MODE, Picture Processor, Dolby Vision, Dynamic Tone Mapping, Dimming Technology, HDR (High Dynamic Range) |
Speaker Type | Built-In |
Item Weight | 94.4 Pounds |
Standing screen display size | 77 Inches |
Aspect Ratio | 16:9 |
Voltage | 120 Volts |
R**Z
A revolutionary home theater experience!
INTROClosest thing I've had to a theatrical cinema experience in my living room. Amazing detail, depth, a visual sense of presence, and exceedingly broad color and illumination range.Probably most buyers will be happy to bring it home, mount it on the wall, maybe add a sound bar (though its built-in audio is also quite good) - and you're all set. The smart TV web interface is sophisticated, regularly updated, easy to use, supports numerous sources and channels for viewing and streaming. (Pop some popcorn, and you've got a theater.)Then there are TV geeks (like me) who already own an audio-visual receiver (AVR system) that ties together external devices as program sources. If you are one of these, well, that's what most of my review touches on, a geek project of replacing a 1080p TV with this LG G3 4K system - and keeping the rest of the home theater intact. I also mention a great buying experience, what a beautiful TV the LG G3 is, and using a mount stand rather than a wall mount. Here goes.BUYING and VIEWINGExtraordinary, beautiful display that continues to exceed expectations, every day. Selected the 65" LG G3 based on over-the-top, expert reviews. Currently watching standard antenna TV programming - which looks greatly enhanced - and where LG G3 truly shines, watching 4K Dolby Vision and HDR10 programming. (In my home theater, 4K input sources are external devices: a Roku Ultra streamer and a Panasonic UB9000 4K UHD player, supported via a Denon AVR with B&W 5.1 external speakers. But again, many others will prefer to use the LG G3's own smart TV WebOS interface as their programming control.)My Oct 2023 Amazon delivery was terrific, using a pre-arranged date/time, safely delivered under my supervision into the front interior of my home by two delivery techs.INITIAL SETUPI chose to uncarton it myself. A 62 lb. large TV is beyond my guy grip for carrying so I safely slid across carpet to an initial test spot, where I vertically secured it at sides plus front and back using sturdy furniture, buffered by safety pads. Since LG G3 has control buttons on its underside, midpoint of screen, I raised it off the floor at both ends, to not put upward pressure against those control buttons during temporary setup.The G3 comes with a wall mount - but no TV stand. You'll likely choose to wall mount or else buy a beefy TV stand. With my older home's plaster walls I chose against wall mounting, going instead with a heavyweight TV display stand resting atop some existing media furniture. Despite G3's slim profile, it's still a sizeable, substantial TV that requires a very solidly built, robust TV display stand if you use that method.My first TV display stand pick was LOUSY for this model: the PERLESMITH "Swivel Universal TV Stand for 37-65,70,75 inch" (PSTVS02) uses a 25" wide backplate, so wide it obstructs the 65" G3's rear coaxial antenna port, contrary to PERLESMITH's product descriptions. I phoned PERLESMITH's support number to ask if they can send me a shorter backplate since 25" was too wide and really, far wider than needed for the 65" G3. They had no solution for me. Had to give up on that stand.Then I chose the excellent PERLEGEAR (not PERLESMITH) brand "Swivel TV Stand Mount, Universal TV Stand for 37-80 inch TVs" (PGTVS28) from Amazon with sturdy, width-adjustable backplate. Its 99 lb. rated capacity exceeds this 65" TV's own 62 lb. requirement. The stand's swivel feature also nicely adapts the viewing angle for my movie guests. A clean, beautiful, modern design stand.Raising a 62 lb. TV and 17 lb. display stand onto media furniture is a two- or more-person task so I hired a handyman skilled in home theater gear for a few minutes to assist, after I'd fully assembled and tested the stand and its locking mechanism for holding the TV securely.DAILY USEI'm addicted to daily viewing this fine system. Viewing local news and saying, "gosh, I've never noticed how many strands of hair my TV meteorologist has" or to continually admire the vastly greater variations in individual colors rendered to the screen - that's the starting point where we say, "this is more like being there, than any TV I've had." And when its 4K support instantly recognizes a Dolby Vision or HDR program source and auto-switches G3's display mode to the matching display standard, and when the purity and vibrancy of inky blacks and bright lights mimic what we'd see in person on location or at a film stage - then, yes, we have an immersive, oftentimes "jaw-dropping" experience.REFINED SETUPExpect to make some setting tweaks as you would for any new TV - particularly if you use external devices. Many home theater enthusiasts with multiple program sources and an AVR will be accustomed to tweak settings at the display, some at the AVR, and to a lesser extent the external devices - generally fine tuning at the higher-end (display, AVR). I tuned my LG G3 display modes by hand without a reference disk (amateur here, though with some years of experience). Then selected my preferred auto display modes for when Dolby Vision or HDR are detected, and for standard non-4K sources. With tons of published tips online for tuning, I won't try to support that detail here. But expect to get to know your equipment. Have a tech help you or study, learn, and tweak settings "DIY" as desired. And have fun!A valued reviewer on this page discusses a feature that challenged me, too. LG's implementation of HDMI-CEC is called “SIMPLINK” and can be enabled to use ARC to:• (A) Send G3's audio output to an external sound system - AND -• (B) Use G3's remote to control external, HDMI connected devices.I wanted choice A without choice B. (I already control existing HDMI connected devices from my AVR plus a universal remote. The AVR gives me matching audio output to external speakers and matching video output to my TV.)LG G3 SIMPLINK seemed to insist I must use both (A) and (B). That bickered with using the AVR, instead, to integrate and control external input devices.Since I couldn't get SIMPLINK to give me (A) without (B), I completely disabled SIMPLINK.Then, for (A), outputting G3 audio to AVR and external speakers, I ran a TOSLINK optical audio cable from G3's TOSLINK audio output port, into the AVR.The TOSLINK standard supports up to 5.1 audio and works well for using G3 to view antenna TV, or G3's WebOS web channels, or G3's WebOS media player for USB connected photos and movie files.If you experience device control conflicts between SIMPLINK and an external AVR, search AV forums for a best solution for your use case. This was a headache for me for a few early days - again, resolved in my case by disabling G3's SIMPLINK feature and disabling ARC in my AVR.Be willing to make home theater design choices. Placements of system, speakers, seating, lighting. And if you use an AVR as your main control, your setup will differ from using LG's fine Smart WebOS as your main control.Since I swapped out an older smart TV (whose "smart" interface I stopped using after its publisher stopped updating it), I wanted my new 4K display to behave as that prior TV: a display device rather than as an activity hub. For streaming I also preferred to keep using my external Roku streaming device as a "modular" component since it excels visually/audibly and since I already had my streaming subscriptions programmed in and authenticated. This also saved me from manually reconfiguring all streaming sources and user credentials into the LG G3 WebOS. This called for tweaking some LG display and AVR settings, swapping in a couple of upgraded HDMI cables for 4K support, and in my case optionally adding a 4K UHD Blu-Ray disk player. Your mileage - your design - will vary.A "gotcha" when using external HDMI devices: switching program sources can trigger a temporary black screen and a brief LG "no signal" message as frame rate and settings promptly recalibrate to match the new 4K input source. (The brief interruption sets up the new 4K program source for optimal 4K presentation.) Viewing then resumes normally, with G3's spectacular output.Hope this helps you shop! Enjoy your new TV!
J**L
So pleased with this TV
If you’re anything like me you’ve done tons of research in thinking about buying a new TV. I previously had a 58” Panasonic plasma TV that was still going strong after more than 10 years of faithful service. It has a beautiful picture and there was nothing wrong with it at all. However, after 10 years the 58” was starting to feel small with all these 65”, 77” 85” and larger screen sizes. The biggest thing I knew I was missing was the ability to display high dynamic range (HDR) images. After a ton of research my two choices came down to this TV and the Sony XR A95L OLED TV. I really really wanted to go with the Sony for the Sony image processor but when I looked at that TV compared to this TV in person there just didn’t seem to be enough difference between the two to justify another $1500 for the Sony.I absolutely love this TV. The G-series is truly a work of art when off and an absolute beauty when on. The edge bezels are so thin they absolutely disappear when viewing content. There is no gaudy LG branding anywhere on the TV which is nice. The TV does NOT come with a base stand but a slim flush mount wall mount. I live in an old house with old walls and I’ve found that the studs aren’t always 16” on center and combined with old lathe and plaster walls I am always hesitant to start drilling and hanging things - especially something this heavy - from these old walls. Also, I have a perfectly good TV entertainment center stand that I didn’t want to get rid of. I searched out a few aftermarket TV stands here on Amazon and ended up going with the “SANUS Universal TV Stand - Large Swivel Base Replacement TV Stand for Screens Up to 86". It ended up working great!There’s no use going into detail about how beautiful the picture is with this TV if you’ve done in-store and online research. It just is. It’s beautiful. This TV sits in a moderately lit living room and it is plenty bright enough to combat reflections. Of course during the mid day if pure sunlight is coming in from the window you’re going to see it. But the brightness factor is something that has plagued OLED technology and this particular TV is extremely bright. Combine the high brightness with the LG screen coating and it does an excellent job of combating glare. Connected to a PS5, a 4K AppleTV, and a Sony 4K Blue-Ray player this TV just continues to blow me away in its picture quality. I have zero regrets in buying this TV and saving the $1500 Sony tax.If I have one complaint - two really - it would be the clunky remote control and the TV’s on screen menus. I can’t stand the odd shaped LG magic remote control with its motion tracking and less than stellar scroll wheel. The scroll wheel is also the enter button and more often than not when I push downward to “enter” the scroll wheel moves ever so slightly and scrolls something on screen. So annoying. The on screen menus are less than impressive as well. Some menus are opaque and some are randomly transparent. Some sections of the menu have explanations and some don’t. Sometimes when in a sub menu you are adjusting the setting and for no reason whatsoever it stops adjusting the setting and goes back a submenu. Some of the menu descriptions are in “good” English and some are in what feel like an AI translation of Korean-to-English. For such a beautiful television it’s a bit of a disappointment that the two main interfaces with the TV are less than stellar. Are those two niggles enough to NOT buy this TV? No. Are those two niggles enough to spend an extra $1500 and buy the Sony competitor? Not in my opinion.This TV has all the HDMI input you could most likely ever need unlike its Sony and Samsung competitors. Personally I run all my equipment through my A/V receiver and then run one 8k HDMI cable to the TV but if you don’t I can’t imagine you’d run out of HDMI inputs. The video game picture mode is super cool and allows you to dial in hyper fast zero lag screen displays and a unique gaming settings menu with one push of the settings button on the remote.All in all this TV has far exceeded my hopes and expectations for a new high end 4K television.
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