Review Televisions TCL

TCL T8C-UK Televisions - Review and opinions

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8.3 Overall

Score

Picture quality 9.0/10
Gaming readiness 8.6/10
Smart features and sound 8.2/10
Design and connectivity 7.2/10
Customer reviews 8.0/10

Screen size

75 in Screen size
Top 3 for screen size 36% above average

Is it worth it?

If you want a 75-inch living-room screen that is built around gaming first and streaming second, the TCL T8C-UK lands in a very clear lane. The 144Hz panel, QLED colour, Google TV and Onkyo 2.1 sound make it relevant for console players and film nights alike, but the real trade-off is size and focus: this is not the kind of set you buy for a compact room or for a purely casual TV role.

It makes most sense for buyers who want a big, fast screen with modern app support and are happy to let gaming features shape the price-to-performance balance. If your priority is deep cinema blacks above everything else, or you only need a simple everyday telly, there are cleaner routes. For everyone else, the appeal is straightforward: a large 4K 144Hz QLED set with Dolby Vision, HDR10+ and BBC iPlayer in a package that looks aimed at serious all-round home entertainment.

Screen size 75 Inches
Panel type QLED
Resolution 4K
Refresh rate 144 Hz
Smart OS Google TV
Included components Power Cable, Remote Control, Stand

Gaming-first motion

The 144Hz refresh rate is the headline practical advantage here, because it gives fast-paced games and live sport more headroom than a standard 60Hz set.

That matters if you want the screen to keep up with newer consoles and a PC-style living-room setup without obvious stutter or blur getting in the way.

The limitation is simple enough: if gaming is only occasional, you are paying for speed you may barely notice day to day.

QLED colour and HDR support

QLED, Dolby Vision and HDR10+ give this TV a stronger colour-and-contrast route for films, series and streaming than a basic budget panel.

In use, that means richer highlights, better colour separation and a more convincing picture when the room lights are down.

The practical caveat is that this is still a QLED route, not OLED, so buyers chasing the deepest possible blacks should keep their expectations aligned.

Google TV and built-in apps

Google TV gives the set a familiar smart-TV route, and BBC iPlayer is explicitly part of the package, which matters for UK living-room use.

That cuts down on setup friction because the TV is ready for mainstream streaming and catch-up viewing without needing extra boxes for the basics.

The trade-off is that the smart side is only as compelling as the apps you actually use, so the value comes from convenience rather than from any exotic platform trick.

Use evaluation

In a main lounge with a console underneath it, the first thing that matters is motion. A 144Hz panel at 75 inches gives fast games and sports a lot of room to breathe, and the confirmed gaming features make this feel like a set that has been tuned for that use rather than merely allowing it. The upside is smooth, responsive action; the trade-off is that the whole purchase only makes sense if you will actually use the high refresh rate and not leave it sitting on ordinary TV duty most evenings.

For films and streaming, the QLED layer is the real everyday gain. On a screen this large, colour richness and HDR support matter because bland panels look flat very quickly, and the combination of Dolby Vision and HDR10+ gives this model a stronger route into modern movie and box-set viewing than a basic 60Hz LED set. The 75-inch size also changes the experience in a very practical way: at this scale, the image becomes the centre of the room, so placement and viewing distance matter more than they do on a smaller screen.

Sound is another reason the set stands out in normal use. The Onkyo 2.1 arrangement with Dolby Atmos support is a meaningful step up from the thin, boxy audio that often forces an immediate soundbar purchase, and the built-in speaker layout makes the TV more self-contained for first-day setup. That said, this is still a large living-room television, so the best fit is a buyer who wants strong built-in audio as a convenience rather than someone expecting a full cinema system from the panel alone.

Pros

  • 144Hz refresh rate makes it a credible gaming-focused living-room TV.
  • QLED picture with Dolby Vision and HDR10+ gives films and streaming more colour and punch.
  • Onkyo 2.1 with Dolby Atmos reduces the need for an immediate soundbar purchase.
  • Google TV and BBC iPlayer suit UK streaming habits well.

Cons

  • 75-inch size demands proper room space and sensible viewing distance.
  • QLED is strong for colour, but it is not the same route as OLED for absolute black levels.
  • The gaming and audio extras add value mainly if you will use them regularly.

Community

User reviews

The pattern here is clear enough: people are most convinced when the set is used for gaming, streaming and everyday family viewing rather than as a pure cinema display. The recurring hesitation is not about the feature list, but about whether the size and feature mix suit the room and the way the TV will actually be used.

Comparison

Attribute TCL T8C-UK Current TCL 65T8C-UK Hisense 55U7QTUK LG OLED48C55LA
Price £649.00 £504.99 £506.00 £849.00
Screen size 75 Inches 65 Inches 55 Inches 48 Inches
Resolution 4K 4K 4K 4K
Panel type QLED QLED Mini Led OLED
Refresh rate 144 Hz 144 Hz 144 Hz 120 Hz
Smart OS Google TV Google TV - -
Included components Power Cable, Remote Control, Stand - Stand, Remote, Cable, Instructions -
Editorial score 8.3/10 8.2/10 8.0/10 8.2/10

Against the Hisense 55U7QTUK, this TCL goes bigger and more theatre-like, while the Hisense route is easier to place in a smaller room. Both sit in the 144Hz gaming-friendly lane, but the TCL makes more sense when screen size is part of the appeal and you want the lounge to feel more cinematic. If you are buying for a tighter space, the Hisense is the neater fit; if you want the TV to dominate the room, the TCL is the bolder choice.

Compared with an OLED route such as the LG OLED48B56LA or Samsung S84F, this TCL is the more obvious choice for buyers who want size, gaming speed and value balance rather than the last word in black level. OLED still wins for pure dark-room cinema, but this TCL has the friendlier shape for a big family room where gaming, streaming and general TV all matter. That makes it the more practical all-rounder, while OLED remains the better specialist for film-first buyers.

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Is the TCL T8C-UK TV worth it?

The TCL T8C-UK is easiest to recommend to buyers who want a big 75-inch screen that can handle gaming, streaming and family TV without feeling under-specced. The 144Hz panel, QLED picture, Google TV and Onkyo 2.1 audio make it a convincing value route for a modern lounge, especially if you want one set to cover console play and evening viewing. If the current offer is in the right range, it is a strong buy for that use case. The main reason to skip it is simple: if you do not need the size or the gaming speed, you are paying for strengths you may never use. Buyers chasing the deepest cinematic blacks should look at OLED instead, and anyone with a smaller room will get a cleaner fit from a more compact alternative. This is a set for people who want scale and motion first, not a universal choice for every living room.

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FAQ

Is this better for gaming or films?

Gaming is the clearer headline because the 144Hz panel and gaming-focused positioning give it a stronger edge for fast motion, while the QLED and HDR support still make films and streaming look lively.

Does it need a soundbar straight away?

No, the Onkyo 2.1 setup with Dolby Atmos gives it more built-in presence than many TVs, so a soundbar is an upgrade rather than a necessity.

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.