Cut the price of a giant TV by $302

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$498. That’s all it is.

You usually need a second mortgage to get a screen this big, not.

The Hisense E6 Cinema Series in the 75-inch model is sitting on Amazon right now at $497.99. It was $800 yesterday, or whatever the day before yesterday was. The discount is steep. A 38 percent slash off the list price.

Why wait for the World Cup to buy the screen you’ll use for it?

It’s bigger than you think

It’s not just large. It’s cinema-grade, sort of.

Hisense calls the picture tech Hi-QLED. The colors are saturated, accurate. It handles high-dynamic-range formats without throwing a tantrum—HDR10+, HLG, HDR10 all play nice. Then there is Dolby Vision. And Dolby Atmos for the sound.

Do you know what Dolby Atmos sounds like when it’s not fighting with bad speakers? Crisp.

You feel like you are sitting in row F, seat 14. Maybe row E, if the movie is good. The audio wraps around. It’s immersive enough that you might ignore the fact your neighbor is mowing the lawn outside.

Fire TV inside the box

The operating system is Fire TV.

This matters more than you might admit. Amazon put their entire app ecosystem on this chip. One home screen. Channels, movies, shows, games—all in one grid. You don’t need a separate stick. You don’t need another remote cluttering the coffee table.

Gaming? There is Luna. Voice control is baked in too, powered by Alexa. Ask for the weather. Ask for the score of a game you’re not actually watching. Ask to dim the lights, provided you own smart bulbs and aren’t currently hiding them under the couch.

It works. It’s easy. It doesn’t require a PhD in interface design.

Grab it now

The deal is live on Amazon. Prices drift, they spike, they vanish.

This one is currently holding at $302 off the original sticker price. But the clock is ticking on sales like this, usually.

If you want the big screen before the summer heat makes you lazy about upgrading your entertainment setup, check the link. If not? The World Cup will wait. The TV won’t.

“Consent is not a condition of purchase.”

(That’s the fine print, not the verdict).

Who else is keeping their 50-inch set just to see what happens next?