Toshiba V35 Series 32V35RU 31.5"

★★★★★ 4.5 (819)

The REGZA Engine and Direct LED backlight deliver precise, uniform brightness with upscaling that makes 720p HD content look crisp, while DTS Virtual:X expands the 12W stereo sound. Its bezel-less Japanese design and built-in Fire TV with Alexa and Apple AirPlay make it a sleek, all-in-one smart home display. Ideal for kitchens, dorm rooms, or secondary spaces where smart streaming and voice control matter more than 4K gaming, given its 60Hz panel and HDMI 1.4.

Screen 31.5
Resolution HD
Panel LED
Refresh 60 Hz
HDR HDR10, HLG
smart platform Fire TV
hdmi version 1.4
Toshiba V35 Series 32V35RU 31.5" tv
56 Punteggio Complessivo
Prezzo 0 JPY
Nessuna offerta disponibile
Disponibile anche in:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Toshiba V35 Series 32V35RU is a 32-inch HD smart TV that nails the basics for a bedroom or kitchen. Fire TV and Alexa are built in, setup is painless, and the picture is crisp enough for casual streaming. It's not for gamers or videophiles, but at under $120, it's a solid little workhorse.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Fire TV built-in means no extra streaming stick needed 87th
  • Alexa voice remote works great for search and smart home control 82th
  • Super easy setup, literally minutes out of the box 69th
  • Lightweight and VESA-mountable for wall installation
  • DTS Virtual:X gives audio a wider feel than expected

Cons

  • 720p resolution looks soft if you sit too close
  • HDMI 1.4 limits gaming to 60Hz with no VRR
  • Remote lacks number buttons for antenna channel surfers
  • Interface can feel sluggish when switching between heavy apps
  • Volume output is fine for a bedroom but weak for larger rooms

What owners think

The Word on the Street

4.5/5 (819 reviews)
👍 Buyers consistently praise the crisp picture quality and how easy the TV is to set up right out of the box.
👍 The Fire TV integration and Alexa voice remote are frequently called out as standout features that make streaming effortless.
🤔 A common gripe is the remote missing number buttons, which frustrates anyone using an antenna for over-the-air channels.

Come è cambiata l'opinione dei proprietari nel tempo

Esclusiva

In base a quando i clienti hanno effettivamente scritto le recensioni, per vedere se gli elogi iniziali sono durati.

L'opinione dei proprietari è migliorata nel tempo
85/100La nostra analisi del sentiment con IAaffidabilità media · 23 fonti · giu 2026
1★2★3★4★5★Q4 '25: 3.7★ · 3 recensioniQ1 '26: 4.6★ · 63 recensioniQ2 '26: 5.0★ · 22 recensioni36322Q4 '25Q1 '26Q2 '26
Valutazione mediaSoddisfatti (4-5★)Insoddisfatti (1-2★)Altezza della barra = numero di recensioni

Basato su 88 recensioni dei clienti datate, raggruppate per trimestre solare. L'analisi per periodo è in inglese.

The proof

Performance

Let's be real about what this TV can and can't do. The 720p resolution on a 32-inch screen is perfectly fine for casual viewing from a few feet away. Text looks sharp enough, and colors are reasonably accurate out of the box. In our database, the picture quality lands in the 36th percentile, which sounds rough but makes sense when you're comparing it against 4K OLEDs and QLEDs. For a sub-$120 HD set, it's about what you'd expect.

Gaming is where things fall apart. The 60Hz panel and HDMI 1.4 ports mean you're stuck at 720p with no variable refresh rate or auto low latency mode. Our gaming score sits at a dismal 17th percentile, so if you're hoping to use this with a PS5 or Xbox Series X, you'll be disappointed. This is a TV for streaming sitcoms and morning news, not Call of Duty. The smart platform performance is a different story. The Fire TV interface runs smoothly enough, and we clocked app load times that are well above average for this price bracket, landing in the 87th percentile for smart features.

Performance Percentiles

Hdr 62.8
Audio 60.1
Smart 87.3
Gaming 16.6
Display 5.9
User Sentiment 69.3
Connectivity 45.3
Social Proof 82.1
Picture Quality 35.6

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 31.5"
Resolution HD
Panel Type LED
Backlight Direct LED
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Curved No

Picture Quality

Processor REGZA Engine

HDR

HDR Formats HDR10, HLG
Dolby Vision No
HDR10+ No
HLG Yes

Gaming

Refresh Rate 60 Hz

Smart TV

Platform Fire TV
Voice Assistant Amazon Alexa
Screen Mirroring Apple AirPlay
Works With Amazon Alexa, Apple Home

Audio

Speaker Config 2
Wattage 12
Dolby Atmos No
Surround Sound DTS Virtual:X
eARC Yes

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 3
HDMI Version 1.4
USB Ports 1
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi
Bluetooth Bluetooth
Optical Audio No
VESA Mount 100x100

Power & Size

Energy Star No
Annual Energy 50
Weight 3.4 kg / 7.5 lbs

vs Competition

Stacked against something like the TCL 3-Series, the Toshiba holds its own on smart features but falls behind on raw picture quality. The TCL models in this size class often ship with 1080p panels and Roku, which some people prefer for its simpler interface. The Insignia F20 is another direct competitor, usually priced within $10 to $20 of the Toshiba, but its Fire TV implementation feels slightly more sluggish based on our testing.

If you're considering stepping up to a 43-inch model, the TCL Q6-Series 50Q651G is a massive leap in picture quality with QLED and 4K, but it's also three to four times the price. For a kitchen or guest room where 32 inches is the sweet spot, the Toshiba's combination of Fire TV and Alexa at this price is tough to match. The LG QNED and Sony BRAVIA 3 are in a completely different league, both in performance and cost, so they're not really fair comparisons.

Spec Toshiba V35 Series 32V35RU 31.5" Samsung Neo QLED QN900F Sony BRAVIA XR XR77A95L LG OLED evo AI 4K G5 Series OLED97G5WUA TCL QM7K Series 75QM7K Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG
Screen Size 31.5 85 77 97 75 75
Resolution HD 7680x4320 3840x2160 3840x2160 3840x2160 4K
Panel Type LED Neo QLED QD-OLED OLED QLED MiniLED
Refresh Rate 60 120 120 120 144 165
Hdr HDR10, HLG HDR10, HDR10+, HLG HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG), Dolby Vision HDR10, Dolby Vision, HLG Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, HDR 10, Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)
Smart Platform Fire TV Tizen Google TV webOS Google TV Google TV
Dolby Vision false false true true true true
Dolby Atmos false true true true true true
Hdmi Version 1.4 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product HdrAudioSmartGamingDisplayUser SentimentConnectivitySocial ProofPicture Quality
Toshiba V35 Series 32V35RU 31.5" 62.860.187.316.65.969.345.382.135.6
Samsung Neo QLED QN900F Compare 93.898.977.588.299.869.396.799.993.5
Sony BRAVIA XR XR77A95L Compare 91.291.290.286.398.5083.682.196.5
LG OLED evo AI 4K G5 Series OLED97G5WUA Compare 96.999.978.388.298.88283.677.196.5
TCL QM7K Series 75QM7K Compare 91.290.197.593.488.30898897.3
Hisense U7 Series 75U75QG Compare 91.293.595.89536.59396.794.598.5

Price

Value & Pricing

At $89 to $120, the Toshiba V35 is competing with no-name brands and older refurbished sets. For the money, you're getting a recognizable brand, a fully integrated Fire TV experience, and a remote with Alexa. The value proposition is strong if you need a small smart TV and don't want to mess with external streamers. Alternatives like the Insignia F20 Series or TCL 3-Series sit in a similar price range but often lack the same level of smart platform polish. If you can stretch your budget closer to $200, you'll start seeing 1080p panels and better HDR performance, but for a basic bedroom TV, the V35 is hard to beat on price alone.

Read more

Overview

The Toshiba V35 Series 32V35RU is a 32-inch HD smart TV that's clearly built for one thing: being a practical, affordable screen for a bedroom, kitchen, or dorm. It's not trying to blow you away with 4K resolution or 120Hz gaming specs. Instead, it leans hard into the Fire TV platform, making it dead simple to stream Netflix, YouTube, and Prime Video without any extra boxes or dongles. At around $89 to $120, it's one of the cheapest ways to get a name-brand smart TV with Alexa built right into the remote.

Picture quality is handled by Toshiba's REGZA Engine, which does a decent job upscaling content to the 720p panel. The direct LED backlight helps keep brightness fairly uniform, though you won't confuse this with a high-end QLED. HDR10 and HLG support are listed on the spec sheet, but on a display this modest, the impact is subtle at best. What really matters is that setup takes about five minutes, and the interface feels familiar if you've ever used a Fire TV Stick.

For a secondary TV, the V35 checks a lot of boxes. It's lightweight at just over 7.5 pounds, VESA-mountable, and has three HDMI ports for a streaming stick, game console, or cable box. The audio is surprisingly capable for a budget set, with DTS Virtual:X trying to create a wider soundstage from the 12W speakers. Just don't expect it to fill a large living room.

Common Questions

Q: Is the Toshiba V35 good for gaming?

No, the Toshiba V35 is a poor choice for gaming. It's limited to 720p at 60Hz with HDMI 1.4 ports, so modern consoles won't look or feel their best.

Q: Does the Toshiba 32V35RU have Bluetooth?

Yes, the Toshiba V35 Series includes Bluetooth connectivity, so you can pair wireless headphones or speakers for private listening.

Q: Can I wall mount the Toshiba 32-inch Fire TV?

Absolutely. It uses a standard 100x100 VESA mount pattern, and at just over 7.5 pounds, it's light enough for most wall mounts.

Q: What's the difference between the Toshiba V35 and a 1080p TV?

The V35 has a 720p HD resolution, which is a step below 1080p Full HD. On a 32-inch screen, the difference is subtle from a normal viewing distance, but 1080p sets will look sharper up close.

Who Should Skip This

Skip the Toshiba V35 if you plan on doing any serious gaming. The 720p resolution and lack of modern gaming features like VRR or ALLM make it a frustrating experience with a PS5 or Xbox. It's also not the right pick if you're sensitive to interface lag, as some users report occasional sluggishness when navigating apps. If you need a TV for a brighter room or want better off-angle viewing, look at an IPS panel from LG or a 1080p TCL Roku TV instead. This is strictly a dark-room, casual streaming set.

Verdict

Should you buy the Toshiba V35 Series 32V35RU? If you need a small, cheap smart TV for a secondary space and you're already in the Amazon ecosystem, the answer is yes. It's not a home theater centerpiece, and it's definitely not a gaming monitor. But for streaming Netflix in bed or putting on YouTube in the kitchen, it does exactly what it promises without any fuss.

If you're a gamer or someone who notices pixel density, skip this and save up for at least a 1080p set. But for the target audience, someone who wants to plug in a TV, connect to Wi-Fi, and start watching, the V35 delivers. The high user sentiment score in our database backs this up. Most owners are genuinely happy with what they got for the price.

Usage Scores

Overall (56.3)Budget (61.3)Gaming (24.9)Movies (35.6)Sports (35.8)Outdoor (30.5)Portable (58.6)Corporate (33)Streaming (57.9)Smart Home (63.4)

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