{
  "type": "article",
  "title": "A $2,300 TV That Talks Big Tech but Performs Like a Midrange Model",
  "summary": "Sony's Bravia 7 Mark II mini RGB television packs in Nvidia G-Sync support, Sony Pictures Core and a size range from 50 to 98 inches, but real-world testing across movies, casting, sound and gaming shows it losing out to rival mini and micro RGB sets at its $2,300 price.",
  "content": "Sony's new Bravia 7 Mark II arrives loaded with technical buzzwords, mini RGB backlighting, Nvidia G-Sync support, Imax Enhanced compatibility, and a price tag of $2,300 that suggests a genuine step up from an ordinary LED television. But after running it through movies, games, live broadcasts and casting tests, the picture that emerges is far less flattering than the spec sheet promises: this is a midrange television carrying a price that does not match its performance.\n\nMini RGB Versus Micro RGB, And Why The Difference Barely Matters\nThe distinction between mini RGB and micro RGB is really something only an engineer could love. Both technologies use tiny red, green and blue LED lights to push color through an LCD panel. Micro RGB is supposed to be the more advanced of the two because its LEDs are smaller, which in theory allows for finer, pixel-level control. Sony representatives actually dispute that claim, telling TrendKia that the LEDs used across the lineup are the same size regardless of which name is on the box.\n\nWhere The Bravia 7 Mark II Still Has An Edge\nSony's flagship Bravia 9 Mark II sits above the 7 Mark II with more speakers, better built-in sound and deeper blacks, but the underlying Mini RGB panel technology is identical between the two models. Buyers of the cheaper Bravia 7 Mark II still get useful extras, including Nvidia G-Sync support for smoother PC gaming and the Sony Pictures Core app, which remains one of the better ways to watch Imax Enhanced high-resolution films at home. The set also comes in the broadest size range of any mini RGB television currently sold, starting at 50 inches and stretching all the way up to a massive 98 inches. Even so, the pile of technical jargon propping up the Bravia 7 Mark II cannot disguise the fact that it did not perform as well as competing mini and micro RGB models during testing.\n\nSetup Starts With A Fiddly Stand And A Login Workaround\nPutting the television together is more complicated than it needs to be. The legs arrive as separate parts that do not fit together in an obvious way, unlike some Samsung televisions that skip screws entirely and let the feet snap into place. On the Bravia 7 Mark II, prongs first have to be attached to the main stand, and only then can that stand be attached to the television itself. Pairing the remote control was simple, but signing in came with friction. The television runs Google TV as its operating system, yet the Google Home app's QR code could not be used for the initial setup. The workaround was to manually type in a Gmail email address and password, a small but avoidable annoyance. Once Google TV takes over, the rest of the setup moves smoothly. After picking a handful of apps to install and mostly accepting the default options, the television was fully up and running in about 10 minutes.\n\nA Remote That Gets Almost Everything Right\nThe remote itself is a highlight. Its small size and clearly marked volume and channel buttons make it easy to use without looking down. Shortcut buttons for apps such as Sony Pictures Core, Amazon Prime and Netflix are laid out sensibly. The one design choice that stands out for the wrong reason is the placement of the Home button on the right side of the remote rather than centered, which is where almost every other TV remote puts it.\n\nFour HDMI Ports, But Missing Features Compared To Rivals\nAround the back of the television sit four HDMI ports, but only two of them support HDMI 2.1. The Bravia 7 Mark II also skips a DisplayPort connection entirely, something the rival Hisense UR9 does include, which caps the highest refresh rate for a connected PC at 120 Hz. The Hisense UR9, by comparison, supports 180 Hz and a variable refresh rate up to 330 Hz for smoother, lower-latency gameplay. Rounding out the connections are a coaxial port for an antenna or cable TV feed and two USB ports that can power a hard drive or an HD antenna.\n\nPicture-Enhancing Features That Underdeliver\nSeveral of the features Sony built in to boost picture quality did not live up to their billing. The XR Contrast Booster made little noticeable difference during testing. A separate feature called Reality Creation is meant to smooth and sharpen older, lower-resolution content, but it struggled to improve the look of several YouTube videos. One genuinely useful design touch is a physical switch located underneath the television that lets owners turn the built-in microphone on or off, presumably as a privacy and security measure.\n\nTesting Color And Contrast With A Demo Reel\nA standard demo reel exposed weaknesses in both color and contrast. Mist drifting over a white mountain lacked definition, grass behind a fence should have looked noticeably greener, and a group of brown buffalo roaming a field did not show enough variation in their coloring. A separate contrast test using a scene of dark trees in the foreground showed the trees blending too heavily into the background instead of standing apart from it.\n\nStreaming Reveals Dull, Flat Blacks\nDeep, rich blacks are supposed to be a hallmark of good contrast, but dark scenes in both The Creator and Awake on Netflix looked consistently dull on the Bravia 7 Mark II. Switching between picture modes, including the XR Contrast Booster, made no real improvement. In one scene from Awake, the lead character rides a bike at night; her face is visible, but the background and a man wearing a blue shirt disappear into the darkness. The animated film Hoppers on Disney+ told a slightly different story, doing more to justify Sony's True RGB branding, though for context the same vibrant, animated movie also looked excellent on an iPhone 17 Pro. The television's more restrained backlighting and average contrast gave Hoppers a softer, more artistic look rather than a washed-out one. Project Hail Mary, streamed through the Fandango at Home app, produced a similarly pulled-back image, closer to the muted look of a matte art-display television than a typical living room set.\n\nCasting, Live TV And A Disappointing Screensaver\nCasting worked without a hitch: streaming Dune II through the HBO Max app played perfectly, in contrast to the Hisense UR9 Mini RGB, which was noticeably glitchy during the same test. On YouTube TV, several news broadcasts looked flat and slightly washed out, while a handful of World Cup 2026 matches showed smooth, fluid motion with mostly vivid colors. The television's screensaver mode, which cycles through static images and artwork, fared worse. It looked too dark and lacked contrast, a problem that was especially obvious while paging through a series of oil paintings depicting shipwrecks.\n\nSurround Sound Falls Behind In One Direction, Ahead In Another\nTo judge surround sound, the movie Unbroken served as the benchmark, since it remains a strong test for Dolby Atmos. After connecting a pair of Klipsch the Nines II speakers to the television, the sounds of planes, explosions and dialogue filled the room convincingly. Running the same battle scene through the same external speakers on the Hisense UR9 felt less immersive by comparison. However, when relying on each television's own built-in speakers rather than external ones, the Hisense UR9's built-in sound clearly outperformed the Bravia 7 Mark II's.\n\nGaming Performance Is A Mixed Bag\nPicture quality issues carried over into gaming. Playing through the Vietnam level of 007 First Light on a PC, a vividly designed segment showing James Bond piloting a boat across sun-kissed water surrounded by rocky cliffs, produced inconsistent results. In brightly sunlit scenes, contrast looked excellent and clear, but as soon as Bond moved into a darker area, the contrast suddenly appeared washed out. The 120 Hz refresh rate performed adequately but was noticeably less vivid, responsive and clear than on the Hisense UR9 Mini RGB. Forza Horizon 6 on the Xbox Series X looked slightly dull and matte during a scene driving a white BMW M4 through snowy mountains in Japan. Sony's anti-glare coating and a feature it calls X-Wide Angle, both designed to keep the picture visible from any seat in the room, worked as intended. But Senua's Saga: Hellblade II and Subnautica 2 on Xbox both appeared too dark with insufficient contrast, a problem that improved only somewhat after adjusting picture mode settings and raising the brightness. Color accuracy, at least, impressed throughout gaming, with the reds and blues in Subnautica 2 looking convincingly true to life.\n\nThe Final Verdict On Value\nThe mini RGB technology inside the Bravia 7 Mark II is genuine, and its color accuracy holds up under scrutiny. But there is no mistaking that this is meant to be a midrange television when set against flagship mini RGB models from Samsung, LG, TCL and Hisense. What it does not have is a midrange price: at $2,300, it feels overpriced for what it actually delivers. It could be worth a second look if a significant discount eventually appears, particularly for buyers already loyal to Sony products. For now, though, there are more compelling mini RGB televisions available on the market.\n\nWhat this means for you\n• For buyers: Anyone shopping around the $2,300 price point should compare the Bravia 7 Mark II against rival mini RGB sets like the Hisense UR9 before deciding, since it lagged behind on picture quality and gaming performance in testing.\n• For gamers: PC and Xbox players wanting high refresh-rate gaming should note the set lacks a DisplayPort connection and caps out at 120 Hz.\n\nQuestions & Answers\n\n1. How much does the Sony Bravia 7 Mark II cost?\nIt is priced at $2,300, which is described as overpriced relative to what it delivers.\n\n2. What sizes does the Bravia 7 Mark II come in?\nIt ranges from 50 inches up to 98 inches, the broadest size range of any mini RGB television on the market.\n\n3. Does the Bravia 7 Mark II support gaming features?\nYes, it includes Nvidia G-Sync support, but the lack of a DisplayPort connection caps the maximum refresh rate for a connected PC at 120 Hz.\n\n4. How does the Bravia 7 Mark II compare to the Hisense UR9?\nThe Hisense UR9 offers a DisplayPort connection, 180 Hz refresh rate and up to 330 Hz variable refresh rate, and its built-in speakers also tested better for surround sound.\n\n5. Is the Bravia 7 Mark II's picture quality good?\nDemo reel and streaming tests showed dull, less distinct contrast in dark scenes, though color accuracy impressed throughout testing.\n\n6. Is the Bravia 7 Mark II the same as the Bravia 9 Mark II?\nBoth share the same underlying Mini RGB panel technology, but the Bravia 9 Mark II adds more speakers, better sound and deeper blacks.",
  "url": "https://trendkia.com/en/gear/2-300-ki-kimata-men-mila-sirpha-midarenja-paraphormensa-vala-tivi-5207",
  "category": "Gear",
  "publishedAt": "2026-07-06",
  "tags": [
    "Sony Bravia 7 Mark II",
    "Mini RGB TV",
    "TV review",
    "Sony TV price",
    "Google TV",
    "Hisense UR9"
  ],
  "language": "en",
  "site": "TrendKia"
}