My 60” plasma is starting to show its age (it’s a decade old) so will eventually have to replace it with something new as it’s time.
Glad to see prices coming down.
We bought an 86" 3-4 years ago when they were still in the kinda-stupid expensive price range, but I regret absolutely nothing - every time I turn it on and enjoy that giant screen....money well spent. And it's still working perfectly years later. I have never had an ounce of problem with any of our LG stuff.
Now they're available (in the cheapie models) for less than half what we paid though, and there's some even bigger ones available for around the price we paid for the 86 back then.
One thing to keep in mind that a cheap giant TV isn't going to have the same picture quality of a medium priced giant TV, or of course high end models. If sheer size is what you want but you don't want to shell out big $, you're going to get mediocre quality screens of course. It comes down to what you're looking for in the end - some people are more than happy with a well priced big TV that doesn't have the bells and whistles like Dolby Vision, HDR, etc.
Another thing....a lot of "smart TV's" are increasingly coming with garbage on them that you can't escape. I was listening to a tech podcast today and the guy was talking about a 75" Roku TV that was priced really well, but was constantly annoying the heck out of him with advertising and bloat that can't be removed, not to mention a lot of smart TV's are constantly "calling home" to share your TV watching choices, show popup advertising, etc - I hear Samsung is particularly bad for covertly calling home and reporting what you're doing.
On some you can block the advertising and tattling using something like a pi-hole or blocking at the router level if you have a prosumer router capable of that, but the podcast guy was saying that he tried that on the Roku in question and the TV just outright refused to work at all anymore.
Perhaps food for thought to get a higher end model where the price isn't subsidized by you being the product forever.