Nobody actually needs a hundred-inch TV.
It is objectively absurd hardware. A monolithic slab of glass and tech that demands an entire blank wall just to stand there looking at you. You stare into its blackness when it’s off and question your life choices. But let’s be honest. If you are building a home theater rig, or you just want your living room to smell faintly of stale beer and victory, you need this thing.
Amazon just slashed the price. Hard.
The specs behind the madness
As of May 20, the Samsung Neo QLED 4K QN80F (the 2025 model) is listed for $3,997.97 on Amazon. It usually sits at a steep $5,499.99.
That is a 27 percent discount. Roughly $1,500 gone.
Is this the lowest price we have tracked for this model? Yes. It is the low point.
So, assuming you can afford it—and you have the space—does it actually work? Yes, it does. The screen uses Mini LEDs. This means the backlight is broken down into tiny zones for precise contrast control. The blacks look deep. The colors pop without washing out.
It has built-in Dolby Atmos. Sound surrounds you, spatially arranged rather than just shooting from two speakers. You do need external audio for a real theater setup, but this gets the job done if you are lazy or cheap on accessories.
Gaming is the real draw here, though.
The panel has a native 120Hz refresh rate. It handles variable refresh rates smoothly and pushes up to 144 Hz without that ugly screen tearing ruining your FPS. Your hands stay steady. The images stay sharp.
What about old content?
The TV runs an AI upscaler powered by 20 different neural networks. It takes low-resolution source material—standard definition broadcasts, ancient DVDs—and cleans them up for a hundred inches of clarity.
Would watching The Golden Girls on this look good? Absolutely. Sunday evenings on MeTV suddenly look cinematic. It might even be therapeutic.
A television this size doesn’t just display images. It imposes them upon you.
Are you buying it?
Maybe you’re just scrolling past it now, thinking about how big your current apartment wall actually is. That’s fair. The discount is real. The tech is solid. The scale is intimidating.
Prices change. Availability slips away. You could wait another day to save a few dollars more.
Or you could just walk away.
It is probably easier that way.





























