Customer Ratings & Reviews
- Model:
- M65QXM-K03
- |
- SKU:
- 6510138
Customer reviews
Rating 4.3 out of 5 stars with 172 reviews
(172 customer reviews)Rating by feature
- Picture Quality4.6
Rating 4.6 out of 5 stars
- Sound Quality4.3
Rating 4.3 out of 5 stars
- Brightness4.7
Rating 4.7 out of 5 stars
Customers are saying
Customers find value in the 65" Class MQX Series Premium 4K QLED HDR Smart TV for its exceptional picture quality, reasonable price point, and suitability for gaming. Many customers rave about the excellent clarity, color, and sound, while gamers appreciate the smooth refresh rate and compatibility with next-generation consoles. Although some users have encountered screen issues, the overall positive feedback suggests that this TV offers great value for the price.
This summary was generated by AI based on customer reviews.
Rated 3 out of 5 stars
Worked fine until....
||Posted . Owned for 1 year when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.TV worked well but didn't have it a whole year and the screen started to go out...kind of influenced the review a bit but it worked great until then .
I would recommend this to a friendRated 5 out of 5 stars
Good Purchase
||Posted . Owned for 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Very happy with the purchase, the service, and the drive up service and help with the loading.
I would recommend this to a friendRated 5 out of 5 stars
Vizio TV
||Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Excellent costume service very pleased with the item I purchased
I would recommend this to a friendRated 5 out of 5 stars
Vizio TV
||Posted . Owned for 2 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.So far the TV looks and is working good. Not what we weee looking for but seems to be good.
I would recommend this to a friendRated 5 out of 5 stars
Great TV
||Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Works great, and definitely well worth the price!!
I would recommend this to a friendRated 5 out of 5 stars
Tv is tv
||Posted . Owned for 4 months when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Great tv to do tv things with has all the Apps and stuffs
I would recommend this to a friendRated 3 out of 5 stars
Average Picture quality. Good for 120Hz gaming
||Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Pretty average picture quality. Edges are soft. I found my TCL 5 series to have better picture quality than the MQX
No, I would not recommend this to a friend- Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Great buy!!!
||Posted . Owned for 2 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.This TV was a great buy. Wonderful picture quality, super easy to use smart interface, lots of apps, free channels, and a voice remote. You can even download a vizio mobile app for an extra remote! A+++++
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
65” Vizio MQX Series
||Posted . Owned for 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.I had bought the 65” V Series before this one. Returned it. The MQX series has a much better picture and quality. Cost more but its a good purchase. All in One soundbar goes good with it.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Tv quality
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
good tv
||Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The TV itself is awesome. Works great with my ps5 and all the shows i watch look good.
No, I would not recommend this to a friend Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Decent value
||Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Decent value but bad warranty so had to ad 20% of the cost for a decent warranty
I would recommend this to a friend- Pros mentioned:Color, Picture quality, Refresh rate
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Affordable "Premium" 4k HDR Gaming Display
Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.The 65" MQX is one of the best performance-to-price panels of 2022 and one of the best I've reviewed/tested period. That being said there were some obvious "corners" cut to make this happen, but it doesn't change my stance in the slightest. Let me begin by saying that there are affordable "miniLed" and even OLED panels now. You can pick up a 42" miniLed Samsung, a 42" Oled Evo C2, and others for around $1000. But if you notice all of those panels are considerably smaller than the 65" MQX and they still COST more. There's really only one panel that can compete with the MQX in price-to-performance and that's the TCL 6 Series Roku 2022. I prefer the TCL, but I think many might prefer the Vizio because of the amount of flexibility the settings menu allows; a great deal of the TCL's settings are locked behind the mobile app and the Roku operating system. I want to make a few things clear first by distancing the 65" MQX from the 50" version because the different is night and day. Though the 50" allows 1080p @ 240hz, that's really the only thing that display has going for it. In every other area it falls short in comparison to its larger sibling. In all of my testing the 65" surpassed my expectations; the 50 inch would have been able to win me over had it included two things: a display port and managed a HDR600 equivalent w/ 800nit peak. I digress and now onto my BestBuy 65 inch Vizio MQX review: I don't have the verified stamp because I was provided this TV through local retail channels in order to make proper recommendations to customers. Still, I've spent a great deal of time watching, calibrating, and examining the entire MQX lineup; I did all the legwork so you won't have to. The MQX has a superb native contrast. I was able to hit around 5500:1 in our tests and maybe a little higher with local dimming. When it comes to real content however, I found that number doesn't actually fit. In real content you can expect an even higher level contrast and I found the rich, dark blacks and extraordinary range of color rather satisfying. But it doesn't just get "dark," it also gets quite bright as well; we were able to track it up to and over 1k nits in HDR. Not only does it get exceptionally bright to make highlights pop, it also manages to sustain a great deal of brightness in large areas. SDR gets more than bright enough to both combat glare and to watch/game in a well-lit room. It's one of the brighest if not the brightest non-MiniLed FALD TVs I've ever tested. Unlike the 50's" local dimming, the 65's works quite well. I was able to get all 30 zones to trigger and while there was significant haloing in our pattern tests there wasn't any inner zone flicker (zones that light up too early/too late). It's one of the best algorithms I've seen on a FALD panel of any type and it's impressive to find it on a budget-friendly Vizio. In real content you likely won't notice the haloing all that much even in fast moving content. I found this 65 Mqx's HDR went to blows with Sony's X90j/k (the MQX was brighter) and Captain America "on your left" lapped Samsung's Q80s (anything not in their Neo Qled/QD Oled lineup). In order to get this level of performance from an LG you'd have to spend a great deal more because their edge/direct-lit IPS panels just can't compete (you'd have to get either their Qned Miniled or a Oled panel). The MQX has decent color accuracy out of the box albeit a little satured (I like the vidid pop for gaming, but It was like a 7/10 for accuracy). After calibration the colors maintained a pleasant pop and with such a high color volume (due to tight zone control and incredible brightness) it actually made a great picture even better. I pegged it at around 96% DCI P3 and mid 80's on the Rec2020 which is exceptional for a panel at this price; I wouldn't say it's great for color-accurate work, but it's certainly awesome for watching movies/playing games. Overall it truly had as much or more volume than the big brands and so it's highly impressive. As far as gaming/monitor features go; it has native Freesync support but we were able to get Gsync working just fine (it's obviously not the module-based certification). The Series X picked up VRR and the PS5 picked up the HDMI 2.1 forum VRR without an issue, so those are huge checks in the plus column for gamers needing a new display. I was very impressed with the response/input times (7ms input and as low as 3.75ms in my personal tests depending on game mode); it's deffinitely on par with your average gaming monitor. Speaking of refresh rate, it's VRR range is quite large and it even has low frame rate compensation. There is some black smearing (as to be expected of a VA panel), some FreeSync flicker may occur as well (hoping firmware clears this and the res halving up) but it's not bad and the Black Frame Insertion feature is mediocre. There's areas of weaknes that stop this TV from being a truly great monitor though (other than lacking Display port); it's not Flicker Free (240hz, so it's perceivable and those sensitive to PWM flicker might get headaches); this can alleviated by maxing the backlight. It has four "hdmi 2.1" ports but only one is full bandwidth with 4k 120hz support (it accepts a full 4k 120 10bit signal and the ARC support is on a seperate port). The final and perhaps most serious aforementioned issue is that the 4k resolution appears to be halved when setting the panel to 4k@120; it's a similar to the Hisense u8h, but I truly didn't find it as noticeable because the text certainly isn't as blurry. These issues could be a deal breaker for some (especially those not wanting to wait for a firmware update). As far as build quality goes I find the MQX to be top-notch, rivaling that of most. However, I'm a huge fan of the Samsung/TCL "center stand" used this year, but that's not to say the Vizio isn't comparable plus it has decent cable management with the included clips. In fact I liked the height adjustment and positioning of the Vizio over Sony, Lg, and Hisense. They are positioned in such a way to allow the massive 65 inch frame to sit on a smaller surface unlike panels where the feet are on either end; it truly baffles me why they went that route with the 50 inch when it clearly works on larger panels. It features above average speakers, but I still prefer a soundbar and there's not a great deal to say in regards to how it sounds; I wouldn't say they're "premium" though. Unlike some, I actually like the Vizio remote and it's one of my favorites due to its size and it just feels more "premium" than those found in either TCL or the Hisense. When it comes to OS, you either like Vizio or you don't. I found it easy-to-use, quick & snappy, and since it's truly web-based it was already preloaded with every app I could think of. There isn't an appstore and the custimization is a little limited, but it's a lot better than Samsung's intentional ad shoveling. If the Vizio had a better "game" hud (it at least has one) like the LG and Samsung, it would probably be my favorite UI/OS overall, but as it stands Roku is still my favorite with LG tying Vizio for second mostly because of LG's game mode. Now lets talk a little a bout those "corners." I knew there'd be some given the price of the TV, but thankfully it wasn't in the usual areas. Underneath it all, there's a great (newish) VA panel with a quantum dot layer and a superb FALD solution w/ a hard-working algorithm. It's something that's unfortunately present on most budget panels in one form or another (Hisense suffers here, but the Viz may be worse) and that something is poor picture processing when it comes to sub-1080p resolution handling (this is the first panel I'd still recommend even though it strikes out pretty hard as a do-it-all TV). The MQX displays 4k and it upscales 1080p to 4k flawlessly, but DVDs are barely watchable because it does a terrible job upscaling 480p (our findings revealed it changed the resolution entirely while also stretching it); unlike Hisense, it continues this trend with 720p, but at least it's better than its 480 attempt (without proper processing 720p's pixel density on a 65inch display by itself is enough to warrant concern). To make matters worse it does a fairly awful job sampling lesser quality/low resolution streams/video as well (this is very noticeable when watching Youtube and this is one thing TCL's typically suffer from). Only the best bit depth/rate signals look good, and so with these issues in mind I dont recommend the MQX as a good fit for over-the-air (unless your area has great signals) or standard cable; if your provider has their own hardware to do the heavylifting (upscaling to 1080p or even 4k) the Vizio will take care of the rest. Otherwise, you could very well be dissapointed in the picture quality. That being said, if you watch TV via streaming apps (Netflix, HBOMax, Prime, etc.), mid-to-upper end UHD Bluray player, or Next Gen console, the Vizio Mqx should meet/exceed the expectations I've outlined in this review. In many ways the 65inch MQX punches way above its weight class as I hope I've demonstrated. It has great IO options too (along with the full bandwidth 2.1); it has a seperate dedicated ARC (plus two additional vrr enabled hdmi ports), USB, Bluetooth, and the latest Wifi 6e protocol. You will not find a TV (much less a Monitor) of this size with the features (4k, HDMI 2.1, Arc, 4k @ 120hz, Freesync, Bluetooth, >95% D3 color), exceptional HDR capability (HDR1k equivalent w/ decent FALD solution that supports HDR10, 10+, Dolby Vision), and gaming monitor-like low input/response times. Gigabyte's s55u is better but it's $1100; Philips' 55 Momentum is better but it's $1500; I could name several high-end displays but you'd be paying more for a similar level of performance or worse using an OS you don't like (some people can't stand the Roku interface). Vizio did well with the 65" MQX.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Great Value
||Posted . Owned for 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Chromecast is finicky at times, but the TV looks fantastic and is loaded with features.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Vizio TV MQX 65 inch
||Posted . Owned for 2 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Not a bad TV for the price at all. Good brightness and pic quality and sound.
I would recommend this to a friend Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Good not Great
||Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.It’s a good tv. It’s not great. Compared to my Hisense that I have in another room, you can definitely tell a difference. The Hisense is much sharper. Also, a few streaming apps don’t do 4K on Vizio TV’s, so you’ll need a Roku Ultra, FireStick 4K, or an Apple TV for those few apps. That being said: for the price, it’s a good tv. I will say the audio is great.
I would recommend this to a friend- Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
very nice TV. not perfect but nice
||Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.I got it for Pre-Black Friday. I got a little learning curve to get the best but I managed to get thru. Not perfect but fulfil my needs for the moment
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
VERY BAD SPEAKERS
||Posted .This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.PICTUE IS GOOD. SPEAKERS ON TV ARE TERRIBLE FOR A VIZIO PRODUCT.
No, I would not recommend this to a friendBrand response from VIZIO
Posted .Hello MKS1, as televisions continue to have larger screens with thinner profiles and sleeker bezels, there is less room for large speakers. To help get the best audio quality out of your VIZIO televisions speakers, we’ve included settings like DTS Studio Sound to provide the highest performance possible, while maintaining the thin, sleek, bezel-less profile of your television. If you’d like any help adjusting your audio settings feel free to contact VIZIO support at 844-254-8087. For top of the line audio performance, you may also look into purchasing a VIZIO Sound Bar, there are several models available with wireless subwoofers for enhanced bass, rear speakers for true surround sound, and our new line of Atmos Sound Bars.
- Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
In Awe..
||Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Still getting used to the size..the fun size and try to find the optimal picture setting what an awesome picture and size fun stuff I’m impressed!
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
High-end quality and performance at a great price
||Posted . Owned for 1 week when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.This TV has a great picture and is packed with features and plenty of ports. It is easily competitive with so called premium brands at a much better price.
I would recommend this to a friend - Pros mentioned:Picture quality
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Vizio Oled TV 65"
||Posted . Owned for 2 weeks when reviewed.This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.Best buy setup was very quick and smooth picture outstanding was easily connected to my existing soundbar. Very pleased with this purchase.
I would recommend this to a friend
















