Review Televisions Hisense

Hisense 65U7SF Televisions - Review and opinions

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80 /100 Overall

Score

Picture quality 95/100
Gaming readiness 86/100
Smart features and sound 78/100
Design and connectivity 68/100
Customer reviews 68/100

Refresh rate

165 Hz Refresh rate
Top 3 for refresh rate 15% above average

Is it worth it?

If you want a 65-inch TV that leans hard into bright-room punch and fast gaming, the Hisense 65U7SF makes a real case for itself with Mini-LED backlighting, a native 165Hz panel, and Fire TV built in. That combination matters most for buyers who split time between sports, HDR movies, and console play, because it promises strong motion handling and a lively picture without pushing into OLED pricing. The trade-off is that this is still a feature-first Mini-LED set, so the appeal comes from brightness, speed, and value rather than from the absolute black level of a top-tier cinema panel.

I’d put this in the buy zone for someone who wants a premium-feeling living room TV that can handle daytime glare, game nights, and streaming without much fuss. It is less compelling if your main goal is a reference-grade dark-room movie screen, or if you’re sensitive to any backlight unevenness in a fully dark room. At the current deal price, it lands as a strong value play for a big, fast, well-equipped TV, but not the cleanest choice for buyers who care more about perfect uniformity than about brightness and motion.

Screen Size 65 inches
Panel Type MiniLED Pro with Hi-QLED (Quantum Dot Color)
Resolution 4K
Refresh Rate 165 Hz
Smart OS Fire TV
Aspect Ratio 16:9

Bright Mini-LED Picture

The Mini-LED Pro backlight, Hi-QLED color, and anti-reflection layer are the core of this TV’s daytime appeal.

In a real room, that combination is what keeps the image from collapsing when the lights are on, and it is the main reason this set makes sense for family spaces, sports, and mixed streaming use. The practical caveat is that Mini-LED still trades some perfect-black finesse for brightness and control, so it is a better fit for punchy contrast than for absolute dark-room purity.

Gaming-Ready Motion

The native 165Hz refresh rate is the feature that separates this model from ordinary living-room TVs.

It gives fast motion more room to breathe, which is exactly what matters for console gaming, action sports, and quick camera pans. The benefit is smoother movement and less blur in the kinds of scenes that expose weaker panels; the trade-off is that buyers who never game at high frame rates are paying for headroom they may not fully use.

Fire TV Convenience

Fire TV, Alexa+, and the included remote make this a straightforward TV to live with day to day.

The smart platform should reduce the usual friction of app hopping, input switching, and getting back to what you were watching, which is a real advantage on a set this size. It is not the kind of TV that needs a separate streamer to feel complete, but the smart side matters most if you want a clean all-in-one setup rather than a more cinema-focused system.

Sound and Room Fit

The 2.1.2-channel audio system tuned by Devialet is a meaningful step above barebones TV speakers, especially for dialogue and casual movie watching.

It gives the set enough built-in presence that you do not have to rush into extra audio gear on day one. Still, the most demanding movie buyers will probably hear this as a good starting point rather than a final destination, which keeps the TV in the balanced-living-room category instead of the full home-theater lane.

Use evaluation

In a bright living room, this is the kind of set that earns its keep quickly. The 65-inch screen gives you a large enough canvas for sports and movie nights, and the Mini-LED backlight plus anti-reflection treatment are the right ingredients for keeping the image readable when windows or overhead lights are part of the room. That makes it a strong fit for daytime TV and shared family viewing, where a dim panel would lose impact fast.

For gaming, the confirmed 165Hz refresh rate and Game Booster 330 positioning put this in a very different lane from ordinary 60Hz TVs. Fast motion has the headroom to stay cleaner, and the set is clearly aimed at console players who want smoother movement and less visual drag in action-heavy games. The practical upside is obvious if you care about sports and next-gen gaming; the limitation is that this is a gaming-leaning TV, so the value of those features drops if your use is mostly casual streaming and news.

The picture story is strongest when HDR content has something to work with. Up to 3,000 local dimming zones and up to 3,000 nits of peak brightness are the kind of numbers that translate into punchy highlights and deeper-looking dark scenes, while the Pantone-validated color claim lines up with the recurring praise for vibrant color and strong black levels. In a mixed-use room, that means the TV should feel lively and high-contrast instead of washed out, but the same Mini-LED design also leaves a buyer-facing caveat for fully dark movie watching, where some light leakage can matter more than it does in a bright room.

Fire TV keeps the daily routine simple, and that matters more than it sounds on a big-screen set. The built-in smart platform, Alexa+ voice control, and included remote mean you can move from setup to streaming without adding another box, and the 2.1.2-channel audio tuned by Devialet gives it a better starting point than the thin speakers common on many TVs. It still reads as a TV that benefits from a soundbar for movie-first buyers, but for everyday use the built-in package is well matched to the rest of the hardware.

Pros

  • Strong brightness and anti-reflection behavior for daytime rooms.
  • Native 165Hz refresh rate suits gaming and fast sports.
  • Fire TV and Alexa+ make everyday streaming simple.
  • Built-in 2.1.2 audio is better than basic TV speakers.

Cons

  • Dark-room uniformity is not as clean as the brightest-room story suggests.
  • Buyers who want the most refined movie blacks may prefer a different panel route.
  • The built-in sound is good for TV speakers, but serious home-theater buyers will still want a soundbar.

Community

User reviews

The pattern here is pretty consistent: buyers are most satisfied when they want brightness, color, and gaming speed in one package, and they are least satisfied when they expect flawless dark-room uniformity or a perfectly polished finish in every room condition. The practical lesson is simple enough: this TV is easiest to love when you buy it for punch and versatility, not for absolute cinema purity.

Mon

The Mini-LED display combined with ULED technology delivers stunningly vibrant QLED colors, deep contrast, and exceptional HDR brightness that makes movies and shows completely pop.

Vivien

The larger screen makes a huge difference, creating a much more immersive experience for movies, sports, and everyday viewing.

Bryan

You simply can’t beat this TV for the price. The brightness is outstanding, colors are vibrant and accurate, and the black levels are impressive.

Jeffrey

The picture looks a lot better, brighter and clearer, especially at night. Setup was really easy as well.

Comparison

Attribute Hisense 65U7SF Current Hisense 65S7SG CanvasTV Hisense 75U7SG TCL 65QM64L
Price $848.99 $848.99 $998.99 $699.99
Screen Size 65 inches 65 inches 75 inches 65 inches
Resolution 4K 4K 4K 4K
Panel Type MiniLED Pro with Hi-QLED (Quantum Dot Color) - MiniLED Pro with Hi-QLED (Quantum Dot Color) QLED Mini LED
Refresh Rate 165 Hz 144 Hz 165 Hz 144 Hz
Smart OS Fire TV Google TV Google TV Fire TV
Editorial score 80/100 80/100 83/100 81/100

Against the TCL 65QM64L, the Hisense has the edge in refresh-rate ambition because this model is explicitly a native 165Hz set, while the TCL is a 144Hz QLED Mini LED TV. If your priority is gaming headroom and a brighter-feeling feature set, the Hisense is the more aggressive pick; if you want a more straightforward Mini-LED value route, the TCL remains the simpler alternative.

Compared with the Hisense 65S7SG CanvasTV, the 65U7SF is the easier choice for buyers who want a conventional high-brightness living-room TV with gaming credentials. The CanvasTV route is more design-led and still sits in a 144Hz QLED space, while this U7SF is built around speed, Mini-LED punch, and a more obvious sports-and-gaming identity. If your room is bright and your use is mixed, this is the cleaner fit; if décor integration matters more than motion speed, the CanvasTV lane makes more sense.

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Is the Hisense 65U7SF TV worth it?

The Hisense 65U7SF is at its best when you want a large, bright, fast TV that can handle gaming, sports, and everyday streaming without feeling stripped down. The native 165Hz panel, Mini-LED backlight, Fire TV platform, and 2.1.2-channel audio make it a compelling all-rounder for buyers who care about motion and room-friendly brightness, and the current offer makes the value argument even stronger. Skip it if your top priority is perfect dark-room uniformity or a cinema-first screen with the least possible backlight compromise. The light-leakage reports and the Mini-LED trade-off matter most for those buyers, while everyone else gets a more versatile, better-equipped TV than the price usually suggests. If you want the stronger all-purpose route, this is the one to watch at the current offer.

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FAQ

Is this better for bright rooms or dark movie rooms?

It is better aligned with bright rooms, sports, and mixed family viewing, where the Mini-LED brightness and anti-reflection layer can do the most work.

Do you need a separate streamer or sound system right away?

No. Fire TV is built in, and the 2.1.2-channel audio gives you a stronger starting point than basic TV speakers, though a soundbar still makes sense for a more serious movie setup.

Editorial team

Daily Device Reviews editorial team

The Daily Device Reviews editorial team reviews product specs, prices, availability, visible customer feedback, and buying signals to keep reviews useful and up to date.