


Design and build quality impress, although understandably more time has been spent styling the brushed-metal 'bar than the black-cloth-wrapped subwoofer.Ĭonnectivity is average considering the price tag, with one HDMI input and one HDMI eARC output (with Dolby Vision passthrough), optical digital audio input, and a USB port for music playback. Height is minimal too (just 5.7cm), making it likely to sit nicely in front of a flatscreen. The SN9YG is more accommodating, with its 1.2m-wide soundbar a fair match for 55in-65in TVs. Such a soundbar would actually be the SN10YG, although for some reason that has not been brought to the UK market. You might look at the features shared between this and the SN11RG and think it's identical, just without the wireless rear speakers. It also has plenty of competition from models from Samsung, JBL, Sony and others.
LG DOLBY VISION ATMOS PLAYER PLUS
Selling for around £600, and claiming a 5.1.2 Dolby Atmos/DTS:X sound experience plus plenty of smart tricks, this system will have plenty of potential buyers. And somewhere between these two sits the SN9YG, reviewed here. About a tenth of the price, and considerably smaller, is its SN4 stereo 'bar/subwoofer combi. At the very top of the pile this year is the SN11RG, a 7.1.4-channel system with a £1,500 price tag and a main enclosure too large for much AV furniture.

LG DOLBY VISION ATMOS PLAYER TV
As it does with its extensive TV range, LG seems keen to offer something for everyone when it comes to soundbars.
