Do you own a Hisense television? Get the most out of your TV investment by immediately changing these five settings
Although smartphones have become a source of entertainment for many people, TVs haven’t been replaced by tiny screens. They come in various shapes and sizes, with many brands. Among them, Hisense sits near the top in SlashGear’s rankings of the best major TV brands, thanks to its good picture quality -– particularly in terms of brightness and HDR –- and affordable pricing. If you want to purchase a new TV for your home, Hisense is worth considering. Just make sure to check for important features before choosing a model.
Hisense offers TVs in various sizes, making it easier to select one that suits your needs. Additionally, Hisense TVs are available with different operating systems –- Android TV, Fire TV, Google TV, Roku TV, Vidaa TV, and XClass TV.
Even with the best, top-of-the-line TV, getting the best output from a device depends on how we use its settings and features effectively. This guide covers a few simple tweaks that you can make to your Hisense TV to enjoy it the way it was meant to be experienced.Change the picture mode
Stores crank up the picture settings to their highest to boost colors and make the picture pop under the harsh lighting conditions. You don’t need everything dialed to a hundred inside your home. Many TVs come with a dedicated Store, Home, or Retail picture mode; however, when you select the Home option, the colors may not be to your preference. Over the years of watching TV, you might have just found the right picture setting that checks all the boxes.
To change the picture mode on your Hisense TV running Google TV OS, head over to the Home Screen, press the Settings button on your remote, and then navigate to Picture. Here, you will find different modes –- Vivid, Standard, Game, Sports, Theater Day, Theater Night (in some Hisense TVs it is called Cinema Day and Cinema Night), and Filmmaker Mode. According to Consumer Reports, you should avoid selecting Sports mode as it can make things appear artificial, and turns on motion smoothing, which could appear as stuttering for missing frames. Similarly, Vivid and Dynamic modes may be avoided too.
We recommend Theater Day, Theater Night, or Filmmaker Mode. While the two theater modes vary in terms of brightness, the Filmmaker mode aims to deliver the picture settings how the program was filmed. If you think selecting the perfect picture mode is a pain, you can choose to turn on Intelligent Scene mode under General settings, and let the TV decide the picture mode.