
Hisense 65H9G 65-Inch H9 Quantum Series Android 4K ULED TV
Over a billion colors, Dolby Vision, and 180 local dimming zones make the Hisense H9G a home cinema upgrade that punches well above its price class.
*Price sourced from Amazon.com. Last updated:Jun 27, 2026.Price and availability are subject to change.
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Overview
Key Features
Unlock the power of over a billion colors perfectly expressed with Hisense H9G Quantum Series ULED Smart 4K TV, which combine incredible, ultra-bright 4K detail with Android TV for quick access to entertainment and apps
Transform your home into an entertainment powerhouse with Dolby vision HDR picture and Dolby atoms sound technologies, creating a truly cinematic experience featuring astonishing images with enhanced color and incredibly immersive audio
Full array 180 local dimming zones deliver a superior HDR experience with up to 1,000-nits peak brightness, while game mode significantly improves input lag for optimized gaming
Control the TV via the easy-to-use voice-enabled remote or through an Alexa-enabled device (sold separately) - Open or search for apps, control the volume and inputs, or search for your favorite TV shows and movies
Measures 57.1 x 33.1 x 4.1 inches, 52.7 pounds (57.1 x 35.6 x 13.6 inches with included stand, LxWxH, 55.3 pounds), the 65H9G has a 1-year manufacturer's warranty, and includes a voice remote (batteries included), power cable, and quick start guide
Specifications
Pros & Cons
👍 Pros
- Full-array local dimming with 180 zones delivers genuinely deep blacks and sharp HDR highlights without the bloom you get from edge-lit panels.
- 180 full-array local dimming zones deliver genuinely cinematic contrast on dark-scene HDR content, with noticeably tighter control over blooming around bright highlights compared to edge-lit alternatives at similar price points.
- Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos support means this TV handles premium HDR content from every major streaming platform without format compatibility workarounds — the metadata-driven dynamic tone mapping of Dolby Vision produces per-scene HDR optimization.
- Quantum Dot technology produces over a billion colors, making HDR movies and nature documentaries look vibrant without appearing oversaturated.
- Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos support covers both picture and audio premium formats in a single TV at this price point.
- Up to 1,000-nit peak brightness on a Quantum Dot panel produces vivid color volume that holds saturation in bright window-lit rooms — daytime viewing remains vibrant where lower-brightness panels look washed out.
- Android TV's access to the Google Play Store puts the full catalog of streaming apps, games, and utilities on the TV without the artificial app library restrictions of some proprietary smart TV platforms.
- Android TV's open app ecosystem means you're rarely hunting for a streaming service that isn't available.
- Game Mode delivers a noticeably snappier feel for console gaming compared to leaving standard processing enabled.
- Dedicated Game Mode with reduced input lag makes this TV suitable for console gaming where visual quality and responsive controls need to coexist — game-mode HDR lets you retain the HDR experience without the input lag penalty of standard picture processing.
👎 Cons
- Android TV's interface loads more slowly than Roku or Fire TV and can feel sluggish navigating between apps after extended uptime.
- Android TV can accumulate background processes over time that slow the UI, particularly as apps update and cached data builds up — maintaining responsive performance requires periodic management that shouldn't be necessary on a TV.
- The included remote control requires direct line-of-sight for infrared control of the TV; Alexa-hands-free control requires a separately purchased Alexa device, which is not included despite the feature being prominently marketed.
- The 180-zone local dimming, while good at this price, can produce visible blooming around bright objects against dark backgrounds in some content.
- At 52.7 pounds without the stand, wall mounting requires a second person and a sturdy bracket — not a solo-install screen.
- At 52.7 lbs without the stand, wall mounting the 65H9G is a two-person installation — not unusual at this screen size, but worth planning for if wall mounting without professional installation.
- The 180-zone full-array local dimming, while strong for the price tier, does not match the zone density of premium OLED or mini-LED competitors — very dark scenes with pinpoint bright highlights (stars, candles) will still show some light bleed compared to per-pixel OLED dimming.
- Peak brightness of 1,000 nits is strong but may still wash out in a very bright, window-heavy living room during daytime viewing.
- No built-in Alexa — you need a separate Echo device to use that integration, which adds cost if you're in the Amazon ecosystem.
- Motion Rate 240 is a marketing figure that includes frame interpolation processing — the native panel refresh rate requires checking, and motion interpolation ("soap opera effect") must be manually disabled in settings if you prefer film-like motion cadence.