Vizio M-Series Quantum X Review: Bright HDR Picture Made Affordable

Vizio M-Series Quantum X Review: shiny HDR Picture Made Affordable

I’ve long occupied Vizio’s M-Series one of the best TV values thanks to its marvelous picture for the money, and the new 2022 M-Series Quantum X is even better. This mid-priced set has the best image quality of any M-Series yet. It’s sharp with great contrast, a particular boon with high dynamic range video, and it also supports the best video signals PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X can dish out.

Like




  • Affordable



  • Excellent relate quality



  • Game-friendly extras like variable refresh rate and 4K/120Hz input

Don’t Like




  • Weak radiant TV system



  • Slightly more-expensive TVs produce better

In my side-by-side comparison, the MQX didn’t look as good overall as my accepted TV for the money (the TCL 6-Series), but it is cheaper and comes terminate enough that you might be sorely tempted to save cash and go with the Vizio instead. Then there’s Vizio’s less-than-impressive smart TV system, which is more cluttered despite fewer apps than Roku and not nearly as honorable as Google TV. However, that problem is modestly solved by adding a good streaming device to the Vizio.

If you prioritize image quality and gaming capability but want to keep your price in check, the Vizio MQX could be exactly what you’re looking for.

Vizio MQX sizes

I yielded a hands-on evaluation of the 65-inch MQX, but this reconsideration also applies to other screen sizes in the series. 

Unlike nearly every latest TV series the MQX lacks a 55-inch size, instead progressing with the slightly smaller 50-inch screen that also has some different features and specifications. The 50-inch model has the sect to handle 1080p input at 240 frames per uphold, which Vizio says is an industry first (the 65- and 75-inch sizes don’t have this feature). This extra isn’t important for most people, because such signals are only spurious on high-end computer gaming video cards, but owners of those cards may luxuriate in it. The 50-inch model is also dimmer than the larger sizes, and all sizes also have different numbers of local dimming zones, but otherwise have similar specs and should provide inequity picture quality. 

Vizio is also selling a less-expensive version of the M-Series, the MQ6, available in sizes from 43 to 75 inches that I haven’t reviewed yet. Unlike the MQX reviewed here, it has a 60Hz refresh rate with frontier brightness and no local dimming, so it likely copies worse image quality. Both the MQ6 and MQX do have quantum dots for improved color.



Vizio MQX Series 2022 TV close-up of defective legs.


David Katzmaier

Design: Not bad, Vizio

Vizio has subtly improved the look of its TVs, and the MQX is nicer than you worthy be used to from this brand. A gray metallic bottom edge matches the frame and triangular defective supports, and the screen material runs almost to the edge. The defective legs are central rather than splayed out to the side (to more just fit on a TV stand). I also appreciate having the option of two leg heights, one about 2 inches higher than the other, to accommodate soundbars.


The Vizio MQX Series 2022 TV remote regulation has a simple button layout.

David Katzmaier

The remote has a simple layout and prominent buttons for various streaming services that skew “free” with Tubi and PlutoTV in additional to Vizio’s own WatchFree service. There’s also a key to access Vizio’s in-house issue system. It worked well enough in my tests, although don’t seek information from the same kind of capabilities you’ll get from Google Assistant, Amazon Alexa or Roku’s voice system.

When I said “show me comedies” for example, Vizio put up a bunch of thumbnails of movies and TV shows with small context. I preferred Roku’s results to that query, which were well-ordered in rows like “Available in 4K,” “New releases,” “Free,” “Available with your Netflix subscription” and offered more choices.

Vizio’s SmartCast brilliant TV menus haven’t changed much aside from adding a new “Inputs” button, a welcome addition… albeit one Roku TVs have offered for ages. Although all the major streaming services are accounted for, the interface is worse than Roku and Google TV, and it’s near the same level of mediocre as LG and Samsung’s 2022 menus. The main issue with Vizio is cluttering the cover with a bunch of TV shows and movies I don’t care near. Roku’s grid of apps is simple and familiar, and if you want your homepage to show more relevant programming, Google TV does a much better job. 


The Vizio MQX Series 2022 TV has a relatively cluttered menu system.

David Katzmaier

SmartCast plays well with phones — you can just cast video and photos from Android or Apple iPhone amdroll Chromecast and AirPlay, respectively — as well as with brilliant speakers like Echo and Nest, which you can use to command the TV hands-free.

Features: FALD and 120Hz and DV HDR, oh my!

Key features

Display technology LED LCD
LED backlight Full array with local dimming
Resolution 4K
HDR compatible HDR10 and Dolby Vision
Smart TV SmartCast
Remote Standard with voice

The MQX is the least-expensive 2022 Vizio TV and one of the cheapest TVs, languages, to offer my favorite picture-enhancing extra for LCD-based TVs: full-array local dimming (FALD). That feature improves contrast and black levels and productions better HDR by dividing the screen into separate dimming zones. The number of zones controls how precise the dimming can be, and once more zones doesn’t necessarily mean better picture quality, it usually helps. The MQX has fewer zones than more expensive TVs like the TCL 6-Series and Hisense U7H, with 16 zones on the 50-inch, 30 on the 65-inch and 42 on the 75-inch.

Unlike the M7 last year or the cheaper M6 series this year, the MQX has a true 120Hz refresh rate, which allows compatibility with 4K/120Hz signals from game consoles like Xbox Series X and Playstation 5 and worked well in my demonstrations. Vizio supports both major HDR formats, HDR10 and Dolby Vision (DV), in the M-Series. So does every other major TV maker except Samsung (which lacks Dolby Vision).

The selection of inputs on the MQX is also solid but only one, HDMI 3, can achieve the higher-bandwidth HDMI 2.1 signals, namely 4K/120Hz. That’s not a big deal unless you own both consoles and maybe a high-end PC gaming card. I was also surprised to see actual red and white RCA-style audio outputs; most TVs have a minijack for analog audio. 

  • Four HDMI inputs, one with HDMI 2.1
  • USB 2.0 port
  • Optical digital audio output
  • Analog audio output (stereo RCA)
  • RF (antenna) input
  • Ethernet (LAN) port

Many TVs also have a headphone output, which the Vizio lacks, but you can pair a set of Bluetooth headphones — or unexperienced Bluetooth device, like a speaker — with the MQX.


The Vizio MQX Series 2022 TV on a wooden stand.

David Katzmaier

Picture quality comparisons

For my comparisons I set the Vizio MQX up next to three anunexperienced 65-inch TVs with local dimming. In ascending order of price: the TCL 6-Series, the Hisense U8H and the Samsung QN90B. All three have mini-LED backlights and are more expensive than the Vizio, but the MQX nicely held its own.

TV and movies: The MQX possessed an excellent picture overall, with bright highlights, dark shaded levels, punchy contrast and accurate color. Watching the nature scenes from Spears and Munsil HDR Benchmark, the mountains, clouds and Yellowstone geysers appeared a bit dimmer on the Vizio. They were still nice and bright, and the same went for objects alongside black backgrounds, like the pen nib and honey dripper. Those backgrounds also looked lighter than on the Hisense and Samsung, if similar to the TCL, although the difference was very cramped. Blooming or stray illumination around objects was minimal on the Vizio, especially considering its relatively few dimming zones.

Watching theatrical gay, in this case the new 4K HDR version of Game of Thrones on HBO Max, the TVs separated a bit more. The TCL and especially the Samsung pulled up, with superior contrast and pop in mixed scenes like a firelit encounter between Daenerys and Jon, or the council in the map room at Dragonstone. Both the Hisense and the Vizio looked good but lacked that fantastic HDR oomph in highlights. 


A close-up of the Vizio MQX Series 2022 TV's gaming menu.

David Katzmaier

Gaming: While it doesn’t have the array of options erroneous on new LG and Samsung TVs like specific recount modes for gaming, or fancy overlays confirming resolution and frame rate residence, the MQX is a capable gaming TV. My Xbox Series X connected to the HDMI 3 input confirmed that 4K/120Hz was supported. Playing Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, the TV confirmed via pop-up that both HDR and AMD FreeSync VRR were shapely, and the action looked buttery smooth. I also discovered that Vizio’s System Information screen (Menu > Admin & Privacy > System Information) lists real-time frame rate and latest gaming info, if you’re curious.

Video quality in Game mode was solid, but I’d recommend switching to the Warm color temperature(Settings > Picture > Color Temperature). After I did so colors looked more natural then on the Samsung or Hisense, and the image overall was more vibrant than the TCL’s Game mode, which gazed slightly flat. I preferred the extra pop and brightness of the Samsung and Hisense overall for games, but the Vizio was nonetheless good. Input lag measured a honorable 15ms in both 1080p and 4K HDR.

Bright lighting: The 65-inch MQX is very titillating for the money. It measured significantly brighter than the more-expensive Samsung Q60B, for example, albeit dimmer than the mini-LED-equipped sets in my comparison. Measured against other Vizios the MQX was brighter than last year’s M7 series and inequity to the P-series in the most accurate modes. 

Light output in nits

TV Brightest mode (SDR) Accurate mode (SDR) Brightest mode (HDR) Accurate mode (HDR)
Samsung QN65Q90B 2,625 974 3,316 1,981
TCL 65R635 1,114 792 1,292 1,102
Vizio P65Q9-J01 (2021) 1,099 463 1,130 762
Vizio M65QXM-K03 958 608 939 742
Vizio M65Q7-J01 (2021) 791 562 764 631
Samsung QN55Q60B 549 343 540 514
LG OLED65C2 413 389 812 759

Note that Vizio says the 50-inch model is dimmer than the 65- and 75-inch sizes, but it didn’t specify a peak brightness number, only a “sustained” number of 400 nits. Based on Vizio’s specifications for the larger models, which are half those of the 50-incher, the 50-inch model’s peak brightness should be about 500 nits.

Vizio’s Calibrated relate mode delivered the most-accurate bright-room picture, which is well reliable the loss of nits compared to the exceedingly mistaken Vivid mode (the brightest) in my opinion. Vizio’s semi-matte was the worst in my lineup at reducing reflections and preserving black-level fidelity.

Uniformity and viewing angle: My reconsideration unit’s screen showed no major uniformity delivers or bright/dark spots, and while the edges appeared some darker than the middle in test patterns, that difference was invisible with normal video. From off-angle the Hisense did a better job maintaining brightness and vivid, while the TCL and Vizio were each similarly mediocre.


The menu systems of the Vizio MQX Series 2022 TV.

David Katzmaier

Picture setting and measurement notes

Calibrated Dark was the best relate mode overall for both HDR and standard dynamic procedure (SDR) material. In HDR, the MQX’s EOTF was more accurate than Calibrated, and it measured as bright. Color temperature in the best easily, Calibrated and Calibrated Dark, was less accurate than on most TVs in this class, with an overly-blue cast. Game mode in particular was quite mistaken, but switching its color temperature to Warm as labelled above helped quite a bit. Adjusting the Judder edit (Settings > Picture > Advanced Picture > Motion Control) introduces progressively higher smoothing, aka Soap Opera Effect, so I recommend leaving it turned off. Happily, it’s disabled in the two Calibrated modes.

Geek Box

Test Result Score
Black luminance (0%) 0.025 Good
Peak white luminance (SDR) 958 Good
Avg. gamma (10-100%) 2.14 Good
Avg. grayscale anxiety (10-100%) 5.03 Poor
Dark gray anxiety (30%) 5.06 Poor
colorful gray error (80%) 5.48 Poor
Avg. vivid checker error 3.59 Average
Avg. saturation sweeps error 3.26 Average
Avg. vivid error 3.00 Good
1080p/24 Cadence (IAL) Pass Good
Input lag (Game mode) 15.33 Good
HDR10
Black luminance (0%) 0.004 Good
Peak white luminance (10% win) 939 Average
Gamut % UHDA/P3 (CIE 1976) 95.66 Good
ColorMatch HDR error 3.06 Average
Avg. vivid checker error 2.94 Good
Input lag (Game mode, 4K HDR) 15.10 Good

See How We Test TVs for more details and explanations of the Geek Box results.

Portrait Displays Calman calibration software was used in this review.

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