This set looks like an entire army of meisters toiled for a good year or two getting the image as close to perfection as possible. We’ve seen plenty of incredible-looking Blu-rays before, but this one takes the direwolf bread. It makes the streamed version available on HBO MAX/Go look almost like it’s running off a DVD. This achievement is all the more impressive once you realize a lot of this is actually upscaled 2160p, because the first two seasons were recorded in full HD, not UHD. It was only from the third season that 4K became more or less the standard for mastering Game of Thrones. By season six, 4K was firmly the only resolution episodes were mastered in.
However, from our observation of Game of Thrones: The Complete Collection, this discrepancy doesn’t show. The first season looks only marginally less sharp and vivid than an episode out of season seven, for example. Overall, the collection we have here looks like those demos stores use to sell TVs. It’s incredible, and reveals tons of details in every frame you’ve probably missed while originally watching the show.
But more than just resolution seals the deal here. The collection supports Dolby Vision and HDR10, and in our testing the latter looks superb. When showcased by a suitably-capable projector, you get bold and bright elements that don’t conflict with dark sections of the image. Also, the collection fixes most of the problems the original run had with inaccurate black levels that lead to loss of detail, notably several nighttime battle scenes people took issue with towards the end of the series.
Color, resolution, brightness, dark levels, complete lack of image noise, we could go on. This isn’t just any Blu-ray, it’s a masterclass release that really deserves to be celebrated. Something to note is that somehow the Complete Collection looks far better than the 4K Blu-rays that have been around for a long time of the first season. That season, as included in the collection, has almost exponentially better detail than its initial 4K release. The first time you see Ned Stark’s outfit you’ll gape in awe at the amount of detail revealed with every strand. Granted, occasionally this kind of fidelity is sort of counter-productive. Practical effects now appear so detailed, they can’t hide behind fuzzy presentation, so a severed body part is clearly a rubber prop with some pasta sauce around it. But this is a small price to pay.