Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Deals

Black Friday is over, but this Sony 65-inch 4K TV is still under $700

Add as a preferred source on Google
Sony

In what felt like the blink of an eye, Black Friday came and went, but not every Black Friday deal disappeared quite as fast. One of the best Black Friday TV deals was saw was on the 65-inch Sony X75K 4K smart TV. This TV is marked down to just $580, giving you a $120 savings on its normal $700 sticker price. This incredible deal is still available as of right now, but there’s no guarantee it will last. Other deals of the same caliber are already sold out, so grab it while you can because there’s a good chance TV will sell out before Cyber Monday deals roll around.

Buy Now

Why you should buy the 65-inch Sony X75K 4K TV

Sony is one of the best TV brands and makes out a lot of high-end (which is to say, quite expensive) televisions. These TVs feature a number of technologies unique to Sony, including some that enhance your experience with the company’s newest gaming console, the PlayStation 5. However, you don’t need to empty your savings account to get a good Sony TV; the brand’s lineup runs a wide gamut in terms of price, with the X75K 4K Google TV being one of the more affordable offerings in the Sony stable.

This model sits at 65 inches, which is a good sweet spot for a larger TV for living rooms and similar common areas. It’s big, but not so big that it’ll overwhelm your living room. Its 60Hz LED panel might not be as bleeding-edge as an OLED TV, but it’s also not nearly as expensive. Nonetheless, it still has some nice Sony features like 4K XR-Reality PRO upscaling for legacy media and Motionflow XR for smoothing out fast-paced on-screen movement (think action movies and video games). For HDR TV content, the Sony X75K supports HDR10 and Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) to deliver a wider range of colors. It also has both the Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa voice assistants built in.

Right now, the 65-inch Sony X75K 4K TV marked down by $120 from its usual $700 sticker price, letting you buy it right now for $580. For the price, this is one of the better Sony TV Black Friday deals that is still available today if you’re after a reasonably priced, name-brand, 65-inch 4K TV for your home theater setup.

Buy Now

Lucas Coll
Former Deals and News Writer
Lucas Coll has been a freelance writer for almost a decade and has penned articles on tech, video games, travel, cars, and…
Razer dressed its gaming earbuds for PS5 and Xbox, then priced them surprisingly well
Razer's Hammerhead V3 X HyperSpeed now looks loyal to Xbox and PlayStation. But one pair cheats.
Razer Hammerhead V3 X HyperSpeed for PlayStation

Razer has refreshed the design of its affordable gaming earbuds in Xbox green and PlayStation white. Beneath the matching colors, however, one version has a compatibility advantage. The Razer Hammerhead V3 X HyperSpeed for Xbox and Hammerhead V3 X HyperSpeed for PlayStation are available now for $99.99 each, matching the price of the existing standard model.

The PlayStation edition combines white earbuds with blue Razer logos and a PS-branded case, while the Xbox model uses black earbuds, green logos, and a bright green case interior.

Read more
Your next song could soon carry an AI warning label, and the music industry is all for it
AI isn't the problem anymore. Knowing it's AI is.
AI tag imagined with AI

The music industry's battle with artificial intelligence is entering a new phase. After spending the past two years fighting AI companies in court and pushing back against unauthorized training on copyrighted music, record labels are now turning their attention to something far simpler: transparency. A coalition representing major record labels, artists, and music organizations wants streaming services such as Spotify and Apple Music to clearly tell listeners when a song has been created with artificial intelligence.

The proposal, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, comes as AI-generated music becomes increasingly difficult to distinguish from songs created by human artists. Rather than banning AI music altogether, the industry is arguing that listeners deserve to know what they're hearing before they hit play.

Read more
Your YouTube playlists can now become actual TV shows, but there’s a catch you need to know
YouTube just gave Partner Program creators the episodic infrastructure that Netflix has been using to keep audiences hooked for years.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

YouTube just gave its creators a tool that streaming platforms take for granted. I’m talking about the ability to structure content as proper episodic TV. 

If you're in the YouTube Partner Program and you’ve been organizing your videos into playlists while praying that the algorithm and your audience notice, then Shows is the upgrade you've been waiting for.

Read more