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samsung u8000f review

The Samsung U8000F is a budget‑friendly 2025 Crystal UHD 4K TV that delivers solid color accuracy and decent smart features, but it cuts corners in brightness, motion, and connectivity, so it’s best for casual viewing rather than home‑cinema enthusiasts or serious HDR fans.

What the U8000F is

The Samsung U8000F is an entry‑level 4K LCD TV in Samsung’s Crystal UHD line, replacing the DU8000 and offered in multiple sizes from around 43 to 85 inches.

It uses a VA‑type LCD panel (or VA/IPS depending on size and region) with 4K resolution, a 60 Hz refresh rate, and Samsung’s Crystal Processor 4K, targeting buyers who want a modern smart TV at a low price.

Picture quality in practice

Out of the box, color accuracy in SDR is impressively good for the price, especially in Movie and Filmmaker modes, which show low grayscale and color errors close to professional calibration levels.

However, peak brightness is limited and there is no local dimming, so HDR lacks punch, dark scenes can look flat or washed out in brighter rooms, and motion can blur during fast sports or action content.

HDR, movies, and gaming

The TV supports HDR10, HDR10+, and HLG, and tracks HDR tone mapping reasonably well, but its modest brightness and global dimming mean highlights never reach true “cinematic” impact.

For gaming, input lag is low and responsiveness is good for console players, yet the 60 Hz panel, lack of HDMI 2.1 features, and limited motion handling make it less ideal for high‑frame‑rate or competitive gaming setups.

Smart features and usability

The U8000F runs Tizen with Samsung’s updated One UI style, providing a smooth, modern home screen and easy access to major streaming apps plus Samsung TV Plus.

Navigation can feel slower than on higher‑end Samsung models due to the more basic processor, and some users report quirks like limited external subtitle support (TXT only, not SRT/SUB) on certain regional variants.

Strengths, weaknesses, and verdict

Key strengths include accurate SDR color, decent contrast (especially on VA versions), low input lag, a stylish slim design, and a well‑stocked smart platform at an aggressive price point.

Notable weaknesses are low HDR brightness, no local dimming, only 60 Hz refresh, some motion blur and dimming artefacts, and relatively sparse connectivity and features versus mid‑range competitors and stronger budget rivals from brands like TCL or Hisense.

Bottom line: if the priority is an affordable Samsung 4K smart TV for everyday streaming and casual gaming in a moderately lit room, the U8000F is serviceable; if you care about impactful HDR, pristine motion, or future‑proof gaming features, it is worth stepping up a tier or considering rival brands.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.