Our previous TV was a Xiaomi 55-inch we bought four years ago. It was fine for the first year. Then gradually picture started looking inconsistent, the smart TV software got slower with each update, and by year three the remote response lag had become genuinely annoying. When it finally developed a backlight issue last month I decided not to repair it. This time I spent more and bought the Sony Bravia 2M2. Here’s what the difference actually looks like.
Why Sony After a Budget TV
The Xiaomi cost ₹35,000. The Sony cost ₹62,000. That’s a meaningful difference and I want to be honest about whether it’s justified rather than just saying “Sony is better.”
The areas where I felt the Xiaomi’s limitations most were picture processing consistency, motion handling during sports, and software stability over time. Those are specifically the areas where Sony invests most heavily. So the premium wasn’t for a brand name it was for the specific things that frustrated me about the cheaper TV.
Picture Quality The Processing Is the Point
The Sony Bravia 2M2 is an LCD TV, not OLED. At ₹62,000 to ₹64,000 that’s the expected panel type. The difference between this Sony and the Xiaomi I had isn’t the panel technology it’s what Sony does with the image before it reaches the screen.
The 4K Processor X1 with X-Reality PRO handles upscaling, noise reduction, and color processing in real time. What this means in practice: a standard definition broadcast cricket match on this Sony looks noticeably cleaner than the same content did on the Xiaomi. The processor is compensating for the source quality rather than just displaying it as-is. 1080p streaming content looks genuinely close to native 4K.
Color accuracy is calibrated rather than boosted. My Xiaomi had vivid mode on by default which made everything look rich and impressive initially. Six months in I realized I’d switched it off because the oversaturation was becoming fatiguing. The Sony’s natural mode looks more like what you’d see in a cinema accurate rather than impressive. After a week of watching on the Sony I now find my old TV’s vivid mode approach harsh when I see it elsewhere.
Motion Handling The Cricket Test
We watch a lot of cricket in this house. Fast bowling, quick fielding, the ball movement these are demanding for motion handling. The Xiaomi had noticeable blur on fast motion by its third year even when it was newer there were issues with camera pans during batting shots.
The Sony’s Motionflow XR 200 on a 50Hz native panel produces motion that looks natural and clear. The first cricket match I watched on it I made my father-in-law sit down specifically to watch a fast bowling over to see if he noticed the difference. He did immediately without prompting.
This is genuinely Sony’s strongest advantage over cheaper TVs at this size. Budget TVs have improved in many areas but motion processing still lags behind Sony’s implementation.
Viewing Angles Family TV Reality
Our sofa setup means not everyone watches from directly in front. The Sony maintains color accuracy at wider angles better than VA panel TVs which is what Xiaomi and many TCL models use. From the sides of the room the picture doesn’t wash out or shift color noticeably. For family viewing this matters practically every evening.
Audio Better Than Expected
20W with the open baffle design is genuinely good for TV speakers. Dialogue is clear at normal volumes without needing to turn it up past 40 percent. The Dolby Atmos support creates a wider sound than you’d expect from speakers in a TV frame. We haven’t felt the need for a soundbar yet which is saying something the Xiaomi had thin audio that made us discuss soundbars constantly.
Google TV and Software
Google TV is the same platform whether on a Sony or a cheaper TV theoretically but Sony’s implementation and the processor behind it make a practical difference. The interface responds instantly. Apps load quickly. Two months in and there’s no sign of the gradual slowdown that affected our old TV.
The voice remote with Google Assistant is used daily in our house. Asking it to play something specific, searching across streaming services, checking what’s available it works reliably. Chromecast and AirPlay both work without fiddling, which matters when different family members use different devices.
Four HDMI ports is genuinely useful. We have a cable box, PS5, laptop, and a spare for guests. All four in simultaneous use with no compromises. ALLM reduces input lag automatically when the PS5 is on the auto genre detection feature specifically for PS5 applies the right picture mode without manual switching.
Two Months In
No regrets about choosing Sony over the cheaper alternatives. The picture processing quality and motion handling are visibly better in daily viewing. The software runs fast and shows no signs of slowing. The audio handles family evenings without a soundbar. The build quality feels like it will hold up for several years without degradation.
The question of whether the ₹25,000 to ₹30,000 premium over a budget 55-inch is justified depends on how long you keep TVs and how much you care about consistent picture quality. If you watch a lot and plan to keep it five or more years yes, the Sony pays for itself in daily viewing quality. If it’s a secondary room TV you use casually a budget option makes more sense.
Price
Between ₹62,000 and ₹64,000 for the 55-inch K-55S25M2 model on Amazon and at Sony authorized retailers. Pricing is fairly consistent Sony TVs don’t swing wildly in price the way some brands do. Check both Amazon and the official Sony website before purchasing.
Sony Bravia 2M2 55-inch Full Specifications
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Screen Size | 55-inch (54.6″), 139 cm |
| Display Type | LCD with Direct LED Backlight |
| Resolution | 4K Ultra HD (3840 × 2160) |
| Refresh Rate | 50Hz native, Motionflow XR 200 |
| HDR | HDR10, HLG |
| Processor | 4K Processor X1 |
| Picture Tech | 4K X-Reality PRO, Dynamic Contrast Enhancer, Live Colour, Rich Colour Enhancer |
| Audio | 20W (10W + 10W), Open Baffle |
| Audio Formats | Dolby Atmos, Dolby Audio, DTS-HD, DTS:X, DTS Digital Surround |
| OS | Google TV |
| Smart Features | Google Play, Chromecast, Apple AirPlay, Apple HomeKit, Voice Search |
| Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi 6 (2.4GHz and 5GHz) |
| Bluetooth | 5.3 |
| HDMI | 4 × HDMI eARC, ALLM, HDCP 2.3 |
| USB | 2 × USB |
| PS5 Features | Auto HDR Tone Mapping, Auto Genre Picture Mode |
| Weight | 13.2 kg without stand |
| VESA Mount | 300 × 300 mm |
| India Price | ₹62,000 to ₹64,000 |
Questions about specific use cases or how it compares to alternatives you’re considering drop them in the comments.
