Review Televisions TCL

TCL Q7C 75" - Review and opinions

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Review updated on
8.1 Overall

Score

Picture quality 9.5/10
Gaming readiness 7.0/10
Smart features and sound 7.8/10
Design and connectivity 7.5/10
Customer reviews 7.6/10

Screen size

75 in Screen size
Top 1 for screen size 36% above average

Refresh rate

144 Hz Refresh rate
Top 1 for refresh rate 20% above average

Is it worth it?

The TCL Q7C 75" is aimed at the buyer who wants a genuinely big-screen living-room TV with premium-looking picture tech, strong gaming support and better-than-average built-in sound without stepping straight into flagship money. Its appeal is easy to understand: 75 inches, Mini LED backlighting, QLED colour, Google TV and 144Hz refresh all point to a set built for films, sport and consoles alike. The clearest trade-off is that the value-first positioning still shows up in a few physical details, particularly the stand and some setup quirks.

My quick verdict is that this is the right sort of TV for someone who wants a large, bright, feature-packed screen for mixed use and is happy to spend a little time getting the picture settings where they want them. It is a weaker fit for anyone who wants the last word in premium finish, the simplest possible installation, or a perfectly sorted out-of-box experience. As a big-screen all-rounder, though, it lands in a very attractive middle ground.

Screen size 75 Inches
Panel type Mini LED
Resolution 4K
Refresh rate 144 Hz
Smart OS Google TV
Dimensions 36.7D x 166.6W x 99.5H cm

Picture that suits real living rooms

Mini LED backlighting, QLED colour and the HVA panel matter because they solve two common TV problems at once: weak HDR impact and poor daytime punch.

On this model, the practical gain is a screen that can look bold with films at night and still stay convincing in a bright room. That makes it easier to recommend as the main family TV rather than a specialist cinema-only display.

Gaming features that are actually useful

A 144Hz panel, VRR, AMD FreeSync and HDMI 2.1 support put this TCL in the serious gaming bracket rather than the casual one.

If you play fast console titles or connect a PC, the benefit is not abstract. Motion stays cleaner, game mode engagement is more meaningful, and the TV has the bandwidth to justify its gaming claims.

Sound that reduces the need for extras

Audio by Bang & Olufsen is one of the more important upgrades here because many large TVs still sound thin and flat.

This one is better placed for everyday use without immediately adding a soundbar. Voices come through clearly, there is more bass presence than usual, and that lowers the real total cost of building a satisfying lounge setup.

Installation needs a bit of forethought

At 166.6 cm wide and with side-mounted ports, this is not the sort of 75-inch TV you casually drop into place and forget about.

Wall mounting or placing it on furniture is straightforward enough with help, but cable runs, HDMI access and stand stability deserve attention before it is fully installed.

Use evaluation

In a dark-room film session, the 75-inch panel immediately changes the feel of the room because you are dealing with a screen that is roughly 1.67 metres wide in the cabinet and built around Mini LED backlighting with QLED colour. That combination gives this TCL the sort of punch people usually chase for HDR nights in the lounge: bright highlights, richer colour volume and black levels that hold up well enough to make sci-fi, thrillers and high-contrast streaming look properly dramatic. The important caveat is that it rewards a bit of menu tweaking, because motion processing and some default picture modes can push things towards an over-smoothed look if you leave everything untouched.

Switch to daytime viewing and the TV makes even more sense. The HVA panel and anti-reflective treatment are there for a reason, and the high brightness focus comes through as a practical advantage when the room is not fully controlled. News, sport and general streaming stay vivid instead of washing out, and the 16:9 4K panel at this size gives you the full big-screen effect without needing to sit absurdly close. If your lounge is bright for much of the day, this is a much easier recommendation than a dimmer cinema-first set.

For gaming, this is where the Q7C earns its keep. A confirmed 144Hz refresh rate, VRR support, AMD FreeSync and HDMI 2.1 capability put it in the proper next-gen console and PC lane rather than the usual marketing-only version of it. The practical result is smoother motion, cleaner camera pans and a TV that does not feel left behind once a PS5, Xbox Series X or gaming PC is connected. The one thing to watch is port planning: the connections sit on the side, and if you also use eARC and multiple high-bandwidth devices, cable routing and input choice matter more than on a set with a breakout box or more flexible rear access.

Daily use is mostly helped by Google TV being quick and familiar, with broad app support and easy sign-in options, but this is not a friction-free appliance in every home. Some people will sail through setup, while others will find the Google side more annoying than it needs to be. Once running, the built-in Bang & Olufsen-tuned audio is a real plus for a TV this thin, especially for speech clarity and a bit of bass weight, which means plenty of households can postpone buying a soundbar. The flip side is physical polish: the remote and stand do not feel as premium as the picture ambitions suggest, and on a 75-inch screen that matters more than it would on a smaller size.

Pros

  • Excellent brightness and strong HDR impact for a large living-room TV
  • Proper gaming specification with 144Hz, VRR, FreeSync and HDMI 2.1 support
  • Built-in sound is better than average and can delay the need for a soundbar
  • Strong value positioning for a 75-inch Mini LED Google TV.

Cons

  • Stand quality is a weak point on such a large screen
  • Default picture processing may need adjustment to avoid an over-smoothed look
  • Side-mounted ports make cable management and wall-mounted access less elegant
  • Setup is not equally smooth for every household.

Community

User reviews

The pattern from owners is consistent on the big things that matter: picture quality, brightness, sound and value are what win people over. The recurring frustrations are smaller but worth noting, namely the stand quality, some setup niggles and the fact that this TV benefits from a little tuning rather than blind faith in the default settings.

User

I bought it as a value pick and ended up with a TV that is brilliantly bright in HDR and SDR, crisp for gaming, and far better sounding than I expected, though the remote feels cheap and the side-mounted connections.

Matt

I moved over from Samsung and was surprised by how easy it was to live with once installed, with a very bright sharp picture, quick Google TV interface and the best built-in TV sound I have heard in my living room.

User

I replaced a 65-inch Samsung with the 75-inch version and loved the picture and sound, but the stand was disappointing on a screen this large and needed extra support to stop a forward tilt.

Terry

I use it heavily with a PC and was impressed by the HDMI 2.1 support, game mode behaviour, strong black levels and deep picture controls, although port layout and ARC choices need planning if you have external audio gear.

Comparison

Attribute TCL Q7C 75" Current LG OLED42C55LA LG C5 LG OLED48C45LA
Price Out of stock £817.97 £1,379.00 £819.00
Screen size 75 Inches 42 Inches 65 Inches 48 inches
Resolution 4K 4K 4K 4K
Panel type Mini LED OLED OLED OLED
Refresh rate 144 Hz 120 120 Hz 120Hz
Dimensions 36.7D x 166.6W x 99.5H cm - 23D x 144.1W x 88H cm -
Smart OS Google TV webOS - webOS
Editorial score 8.1/10 8.2/10 8.2/10 8.5/10

Against premium OLED families such as LG OLED C-series sets, the TCL takes a different route. Choose the OLED path if your priority is the cleanest black floor, more luxurious finish and a more cinema-purist feel in a dim room. Choose the TCL if you want a bigger screen for the money, stronger daylight punch and gaming features that still look serious on paper and in use.

Compared with mainstream mid-range 75-inch LED or QLED models from Samsung, Hisense or entry Sony ranges, this TCL is more aggressively specified. The 144Hz panel, Mini LED backlight, Google TV platform and upgraded sound system give it a stronger all-round case for mixed households that stream, watch sport and game on modern consoles. The alternative route makes more sense if you care more about a tidier stand, simpler setup or a more familiar brand ecosystem than squeezing maximum feature value out of the budget.

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Is the TCL Q7C 75" TV worth it?

The TCL Q7C 75" makes its strongest case as a big, bright, high-value living-room TV that does not force you to choose between film nights, sport and serious gaming. Its 75-inch size, 4K Mini LED panel, 144Hz refresh and Google TV platform add up to a package that feels more ambitious than many rivals in the same broad price band, and the built-in sound is good enough to save some people money on day one. If the current offer is competitive, it is an easy model to keep on a shortlist.

I would skip it if your priorities are premium furniture-grade build, a flawless first-time setup or the neatest possible stand and cable arrangement. This is a value-led large TV with a few rough edges, not a luxury object. But if your real goal is maximum screen, strong HDR brightness and proper gaming support without paying flagship-brand money, it gets the important things right.

On size: the Q7C is also sold in a 65-inch version with the same Mini LED QLED panel and 144Hz gaming features. Go for this 75-inch model if you want maximum home-cinema impact and sit more than about 2.5 metres away; pick the 65-inch instead if your room is smaller or you want to spend less for the same picture technology.

FAQ

Is this TV better for films or gaming?

It is unusually well balanced for both, with Mini LED and QLED helping films look punchy while the 144Hz panel, VRR and HDMI 2.1 support make it a strong gaming choice.

Do you need a soundbar with the TCL Q7C 75"?

Not straight away for most rooms, because the Bang & Olufsen-tuned speakers deliver clearer voices and more bass weight than many slim TVs, though a separate system still makes sense for full home-cinema impact.

Editorial team

DigitalCritic editorial team

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