Is a budget 65-inch TV enough in terms of picture, sound, smart features, and light gaming to seem like a smart choice rather than a poor compromise? After testing the 65-inch K-series, the answer is mostly yes. It won’t satisfy cinephiles seeking perfect visuals, but for daily streaming, sports, YouTube, and family viewing, it remains competitive in the busy 4K TV market in India. The K-series features a 65-inch 4K Ultra HD display, Dolby Vision, HDR10, MEMC, ALLM, 40W speakers with Dolby Atmos, dual-band Wi-Fi, and Google TV 5.0 based on Android 14. On paper, this offers great value. In use, the quality is good and sometimes excellent. This is our review of the Wobble 65-inch K-series (2026).
In This Article
Design
The Wobble 65-inch K-series keeps things simple and sensible. It has a frameless look, a metal-finish frame, and a uniform shell body that helps it appear cleaner than its price tag might suggest. The bezels are slim enough to make the screen feel dominant, which is exactly what a 65-inch TV should do. When the panel is on, the design mostly gets out of the way, and that is a compliment.
The weak spot is the stand. It looks fine and holds the TV in place, but it does not inspire complete confidence. A slight nudge can cause a visible wobble, which feels less than ideal on a screen this large. A centre-mounted stand would have made more practical sense.
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The bundled wall mount is usable, though basic. It does the job, but it does not offer much flexibility when you need to reach rear ports. Thankfully, some of the important ports are easier to access from the side. Users will get multiple HDMI and a USB port on the side.
The remote is functional rather than fancy. It is comfortable in hand, the buttons are spaced well, and shortcut keys for Netflix, Prime Video, YouTube, and Disney+ Hotstar are handy. Google Assistant works reliably too, which matters because voice search is often faster than clicking through multiple menus.
Performance
This is where the K-series makes its pitch. The panel is bright, colourful, and easy to like for casual viewing. It supports Dolby Vision, HDR10, local dimming, digital noise reduction, 4K upscaling, and a wide colour gamut rated at DCI-P3 98 per cent. That sounds impressive, and the TV does reward you with punchy visuals.
Colours are vivid rather than surgically accurate. In plain English, that means shows and movies often look lively and pleasing, even if purists may want more restraint. Cinema mode offers a better-balanced image for regular SDR and HDR content, while Dolby Vision content tends to look more exciting in Vivid mode. Some other presets push contrast too hard or lift blacks too much, so a little tweaking helps.
Black levels and contrast are serviceable, not standout. Dark scenes do not always have the depth or shadow detail you get from more expensive TVs. Still, for web series, sports, reality TV, and general streaming, the panel performs well enough to keep complaints at bay.
Motion handling is decent, and MEMC helps during fast-moving scenes. In fact, switching MEMC to High improves sports and action content noticeably. The 60Hz refresh rate, however, keeps expectations in check. This is not a dream machine for serious console enthusiasts.
The software experience is one of the better parts of this TV. Google TV 5.0 feels modern, clean, and easy to understand. Content recommendations are useful, app support is strong, and features like Google Cast, FastCast, Google Meet, Kids Profile, and watchlists give the TV a well-rounded smart experience.
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The issue is speed. The interface is not broken, but it is not always brisk either. App launches and menu navigation can feel a step slower than you want. It never became frustrating enough to ruin the experience, but the occasional lag is noticeable.
For gaming, this is best described as a casual gaming TV. ALLM is welcome, and there is no major calibration weirdness, but the absence of 120Hz and VRR means competitive gamers should look elsewhere. For story-driven titles, racing games, and relaxed couch gaming, it is perfectly acceptable.
The 40W speaker system with Dolby Atmos has enough muscle for regular living room use. Dialogue is clear, volume levels are healthy, and the TV can comfortably fill a medium-sized room.
Where it stumbles is in separation and refinement. Busy movie scenes with music, effects, and overlapping voices can sound crowded. Push the volume higher, and the sound starts losing some composure. It is fine for daily watching, but anyone chasing a richer cinematic feel should budget for a soundbar.
Verdict
The Wobble 65-inch K-series is a sensible big-screen TV for people who value size, smart features, and vibrant visuals over top-tier polish. It looks modern, delivers bright 4K content well, offers useful streaming and casting tools, and handles everyday entertainment with confidence.
At the same time, it is not pretending to be a flagship. The panel lacks the contrast depth that movie lovers may want, the UI can feel sluggish, and the audio is merely decent once the volume climbs. Still, at an indicated price of Rs 39,799, it lands in a sweet spot for mainstream buyers who want a large-screen living room upgrade without financial drama.
For streaming, family entertainment, and day-to-day viewing, this TV will deliver everything and more. It is not a show-off. It is a practical family-pleaser.
Buy Wobble K-series TV from Amazon here.
Pros
- Minimal-bezel, modern design
- Bright and punchy 4K picture
- Good smart TV experience
- Useful features for light gaming
- Loud enough for regular room use
Cons
- Occasional interface slow-downs




