I saw Sony's first 'True RGB' TV in action compared to a studio monitor and Sony's best OLED TV and based on early measurements, Sony might finally
bring 'reference' HDR performance to your home
Date:
Wed, 27 May 2026 16:00:00 +0000
Description:
And the Sony Bravia 7 II brings similar tech at a lower price, including the world's first 50-inch RGB TV
FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter After more than a year of teasing, Sony has finally announced its first 'True RGB' TVs, which use an
RGB mini-LED backlight. They're called the Sony Bravia 9 II and Sony Bravia 7 II, and I got to see the Bravia 9 II in action.
Sony first showed us its RGB tech back in March 2025 , and then showed it to us again in September , and the again a couple of months ago . It's kind of a relief to finally see it in a product that people will be able to buy. The Sony Bravia 9 II is the highest-end model, and will be available in multiple larger sizes, while the Sony Bravia 7 II is notable for being the first RGB
TV to come in a 50-inch size, which will make it interesting competition for the smaller options among the best OLED TVs 55 inches was the smallest size of RGB set we'd seen so far. Latest Videos From You may like I saw Sonys True RGB TV tech in action, and its a serious step forward TV makers are fumbling the launch of RGB LED tech, leaving OLED safe Ive chosen the best TVs you can buy to suit every budget, after hundreds of hours of real-world testing
They're not cheap, though here's the size and price breakdown of these TVs (Sony was only able to supply UK prices at the time of writing): Swipe to scroll horizontally Sony True RGB sizes and prices
Size
Sony Bravia 9 II
Sony Bravia 7 II
50-inch
N/A
1,899 (about $2,550 / AU$3,560)
55-inch
N/A
1,999 (about $2,689 / AU$3,751)
65-inch
3,499 (about $4,708 / AU$6,567)
2,299 (about $3,093 / AU$4,314)
75-inch
4,299 (about $5,784 / AU$8,069)
2,999 (about $4,034 / AU$5,628)
85-inch
5,499 ($7,398 / AU$10,320)
3,999 ($5,380 / AU$7,505)
98-inch
N/A
6,999 ($9,416 / AU$13,135)
115-inch
22,999 ($30,943 / AU$43,165)
N/A RGB TVs use an LCD panel with lights behind it, like other mini-LED TVs, but the backlight can change color to better match what the pixels in front are supposed to show. Each mini-LED in the backlight includes individual red, green and blue sub-pixels to create the range of hues.
This enables a wider color range within the pixels, and requires less color filtering to do it, so the panels can have fewer layers, which helps with efficiency. Here's the backlight of the original Bravia 9 (left), the backlight of the Bravia 9 II (right), and the what the final image would look like (Image credit: Future) Sony has combined this with its X-Wide Angle Pro wide viewing angle, as well as a new anti-reflective system. Sony refused to give any information about the anti-reflective layer, but it looked to me
like a matte element is involved, given the sheen that light created on the screen in my demo room. Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your
inbox Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more. Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from
us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over. The Bravia 9 II has a more powerful backlight system than
the Bravia 7 II, but I didn't see them compared in real scenes directly, and Sony doesn't tend to discuss that kind of technical information too deeply.
What I did see was the Bravia 9 II compared to the Sony Bravia 8 II QD- OLED TV, the Sony Bravia 9 mini-LED (original non-RGB flavor), and Sony's
reference studio monitor that's used for pro film grading though sadly I couldn't take and share photos of the comparison.
Ever since the Bravia 9 was first announced, which was shortly after Sony rolled out its current studio reference monitor that reaches 4,000 nits of brightness, Sony has been pushing the idea that it wants its TVs to be able
to perfectly replicate the HDR experience of the reference monitor. What to read next The best mini-LED TVs for all budgets, tested by our experts How Hisense's RGB MiniLED is redefining what a premium TV can do TCL finally brings its flagship mini-LED TVs to the UK this year
Sony believes that more movies will be mastered for 4,000 nits of brightness now that there's a suitable 4,000-nit monitor (1,000 nits has been by far the most common mastering level), and so to replicate the full tonal range of these movies properly, TVs should also be able to hit 4,000 nits of peak brightness.
This hasn't been possible in any of Sony's previous TVs, and it's quite obvious when you turn the tone mapping off that you lose a lot of detail in bright highlights when compared to the studio monitor but Sony's demo showed that the Bravia 9 II lost much less detail in those areas in a direct comparison with all four screens.
It still wasn't able to exactly recreate the reference monitor, but it was by far the closest to recreating the pure reference image for HDR tones and in color for some scenes, though this was much less clear-cut, with the Bravia 8 II putting in a strong showing in this case, and the Bravia 9 occasionally looking closer in certain scenes.
Sony declined to say what the actual brightness of the TV is expected to be, but happily we've had access to a pre-production unit to be able to measure this ourselves. The Sony Bravia 9 II is a bit of a brightness beast (Image credit: Future) The Bravia 9 II is capable of 3,990 nits in Professional Mode (which is the most accurate mode, and is closest to the Filmmaker Mode that
we usually like to test in) in a 10% HDR window so yes, it's basically capable of that promised 4,000-nit paradise.
Even more impressive is its fullscreen brightness in this mode, which we measured at 827 nits that's around double the fullscreen brightness we got from the similarly priced LG G6 OLED TV .
For comparison, we measured the Sony Bravia 8 II OLED at 1,439 nits in a 10% HDR window and 183 nits of fullscreen brightness. We measured the Bravia 9 (original) at 1,871 nits in a 10% window and 495 nits fullscreen.
We've also had the chance to measure the Sony Bravia 7 II's brightness, and that delivered 2078 nits in Professional Mode in a 10% HDR window, so we can expect the HDR performance of the Bravia 9 II to have clearly strong impact although the Bravia 7 II actually delivered over 900 nits of fullscreen brightness in our measurements, so it actually beats its big sibling there. The Bravia 7 II looks super-rich despite its more limited performance (Image credit: Future) These measurements were taken on pre-production units, as I mentioned, so we'll make sure that the final versions test the same but they're impressive numbers.
The big question is whether the contrast and dark-tone performance will be as good. It looked strong in Sony's brief demos, but the company is unlikely to have shown be anything that might indicate color bleed from the RGB
backlight, so we look forward to digging into that. Other things to note
about the Bravia 9 II include its use of Sony's Acoustic Multi-Audio+ tech, which means powerful built-in speakers that now include upfiring speakers for more height in Dolby Atmos or DTS:X soundtracks.
On the downside, however, the TV still comes with only two HDMI 2.1 ports
(out of four ports in total). Sony is basically the only manufacturer launching new high-end TVs with only two HDMI 2.1 ports, and it's frustratingly limiting if you plan to connect a soundbar as well.
I also want to highlight the fun new stand design of these TVs. The main
panel of the stand is made from a light-bending material that lets through
the tone of what's behind it, but not specific details. Image 1 of 2 (Image credit: Future) (Image credit: Future) I'm very impressed with my early looks at the Bravia 9 II and Bravia 8 II they're both very premium TVs, but the 9 II looks like it could compete hard with Samsung to offer the best TV for brighter rooms with its huge brightness and anti-reflection tech, but with Sony's meticulous attention to accuracy.
And I'm desperate to get my hands on the little 50-inch Bravia 7 II, because it could be the premium competition to the LG C6 at this size. Stay tuned for our full reviews later. Thinking of buying a new TV? Try our TV size and
model finder! You tell it how far you sit from your TV, we'll tell you what size to buy based on viewing angle advice from image quality experts, and we'll recommend our three top TVs at that size for different prices. Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds.
======================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/televisions/i-saw-sonys-first-true-rgb-tv-in-action- compared-to-a-studio-monitor-and-sonys-best-oled-tv-and-based-on-early-measure ments-sony-might-finally-bring-reference-hdr-performance-to-your-home
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 (Linux/64)
* Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)