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The TV-buying experience has a lot in common with buying paint: it always looks different in your home than it did in the store. While paint colors look different on your wall because the gods delight in small miseries, TVs have special picture settings just for store display units that push them to the limit and are designed to grab your attention from the next department over.
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Retail picture modes boost contrast, color saturation, 4K upscaling, and motion smoothing to create a very bold image, but don't always reflect how a TV will look in your home when using a common preset or a custom picture mode.
While most new smart TVs automatically boot into home mode when being set up, it's possible to accidentally enable a demo mode or have it toggled on after a factory reset. Thankfully, each brand has made it a very simple process to disable store modes or toggle between them and home mode presets.
Whether it's called Demo Mode, Store Mode, or Retail Mode, each brand's flavor of picture setting does the same thing: boost key aspects like contrast, brightness, and motion smoothing to get a bolder-looking image that grabs your attention in the store.
Colors are often much more saturated than in home-use picture modes, creating much more vivid pictures that may come at the expense of color accuracy. Brightness is also cranked to the nth degree to compete with other screens and harsh fluorescent lights.
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While it's a great way to show off what a TV is capable of with a few menu tweaks, it can sometimes misrepresent what kind of picture quality you'll get in a typical home theater or living room.
Compared to store mode, with ultra-sharp contrast and oversaturated colors, home mode picture settings may look flatter and less eye-catching. But that's by design. Home mode isn't set up to have your TV compete with screens from other brands for your money, it's there to provide the best viewing experience for your space.
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And with just a few manual adjustments, you'll be able to get colors, contrast, and detailing that's very close to the over-the-top picture you see in the store.
If you prefer to manually tweak your TV's picture settings or just want to take advantage of the included preset picture modes, it's a fairly straightforward process to disable demo or store mode. While many brands have toggles buried in the settings menu, if you have a Fire or Roku TV, you'll have to do a few extra steps.
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To help walk you through the process, I've broken down each brand's menu to help you find the correct settings.
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