

There’s no shortage of flashy TV deals during Amazon’s Big Spring Sale, but if I were trying to make a living room feel more cinematic without jumping to a full AVR-and-speaker setup, I’d be looking just as hard at the soundbar category.
One reason I like shopping soundbars during a big sale event is that the category is unusually broad right now. You’ve got true surround packages with rear speakers and big subwoofers, compact bars built for smaller rooms, and dialogue-focused options for people who are simply tired of asking, “What did they just say?” The models below cover all of those use cases, from full-blown Atmos systems to simpler bars that still do a much better job than built-in TV speakers.
| Soundbar | Original Price | Discounted Price | You Save |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nakamichi Shockwafe Ultra | $1,897.99 | $1,099.00 | $798.99 |
| Samsung HW-Q990F | $1,497.98 | $952.94 | $545.04 |
| LG S95TR | $1,599.99 | $896.99 | $703.00 |
| ULTIMEA Skywave X70 | $999.00 | $699.00 | $300.00 |
| JBL Bar 700MK2 | $899.95 | $617.45 | $282.50 |
| Sony BRAVIA Theater Bar 6 | $699.99 | $548.00 | $151.99 |
| Polk Audio Signa S4 | $449.00 | $379.00 | $70.00 |
| Sonos Beam Gen 2 | $499.00 | $369.00 | $130.00 |
| ZVOX AccuVoice AV855 | $349.99 | $299.99 | $50.00 |
| Klipsch Flexus CORE 100 | $349.00 | $279.99 | $69.01 |

If I wanted the most unapologetically over-the-top home theater package in this group, I’d start with the Nakamichi Shockwafe Ultra. This is the kind of soundbar system that tries to get you as close as possible to a component-style surround setup without asking you to buy an AVR.
It is a 9.2.4-channel system, and the package includes dual 10-inch wireless subwoofers plus four modular surround speakers. That alone tells you what kind of buyer this is for: somebody who wants the room to feel active, not somebody looking for a discreet little bar under the TV.
At $1,099.00, it is still a serious purchase, but it changes the conversation from “luxury splurge” to “possible endgame soundbar system for the right room.” I’d put this on the shortlist for large spaces, action-movie fans, and anyone who thinks one subwoofer is usually not enough. The tradeoff, of course, is footprint and setup complexity. This is not the neatest or simplest solution here, but if big-room impact is the goal, it has one of the strongest cases in the entire sale lineup.

Samsung’s HW-Q990F is the soundbar on this list that feels most like the polished mainstream flagship. It is an 11.1.4-channel system with rear speakers and wireless Dolby Atmos, and the company leans heavily on features like Q-Symphony and its multi-speaker layout to create a genuinely enveloping presentation. Which means that this is the kind of package I’d recommend to somebody who wants a premium home theater upgrade but also wants everything to feel modern, streamlined, and easy to live with day to day.
This is one of the most aggressive deals in the bunch: from $1,497.98 down to $952.94, saving $545.04. That pushes it into the zone where I’d expect a lot of shoppers to choose it over piecing together a more complicated system. I also think this is one of the safest picks for buyers who want high-end performance without gambling on a niche brand or experimental form factor.
If your TV happens to be a Samsung, the ecosystem perks are an extra bonus, but even outside that setup, the Q990F looks like one of the most complete premium packages in the sale. Read our full Samsung HW-Q990F review.

The LG S95TR is another flagship-style system, but it comes at the problem from LG’s angle: a 9.1.5-channel package with rear speakers, triple up-firing channels, Dolby Atmos, DTS:X, and LG’s TV-integration features like WOW Orchestra and AI Room Calibration. What stands out to me is that LG is clearly aiming for buyers who want a big, immersive setup but still want a product that feels tied neatly into a modern TV ecosystem instead of a standalone audio experiment.
From a value perspective, this might be one of the most eye-catching deals here. Dropping from $1,599.99 to $896.99 is a huge cut for a flagship Atmos package with rears in the box. Personally, this is the kind of sale that would make me stop and seriously compare LG against Samsung at the upper end rather than automatically defaulting to whichever one I saw first. If you own an LG TV, the pairing makes even more sense, but even on its own, the S95TR looks like a lot of hardware for the money during this sale window. Read our full LG S95TR review.

ULTIMEA is the wildcard brand in this roundup, but the Skywave X70 is interesting because it doesn’t play small. It is a 7.1.4 Dolby Atmos system with 980W peak power, a 10-inch subwoofer, HDMI eARC, app control, and 4K HDR passthrough. On paper, that is a lot of ambition for a brand that sits outside the usual Samsung-LG-Sony-Sonos conversation. It reads like a product built to win over deal shoppers who want the “big Atmos package” experience without paying traditional flagship money.
The current pricing supports exactly that pitch: $999.00 down to $699.00, saving $300.00. That still isn’t cheap, but it lands far below the established premium giants while still promising a large-scale surround experience.
I’d approach it as the value-seeker’s “swing for the fences” option in this list. If I were buying with my own money, I’d still give extra weight to the more established brands for long-term support and refinement, but I can absolutely see why someone scanning Big Spring Sale deals would stop on this one and think, “That’s a lot of soundbar for seven hundred bucks.” Read our full Skywave X70 review.

The JBL Bar 700MK2 strikes me as one of the more fun, practical middle-ground options here. It delivers 7.1-channel sound with Dolby Atmos, DTS Virtual:X, a 10-inch wireless subwoofer, and detachable wireless speakers. That last part matters because it turns this from a basic soundbar into a more flexible home theater package. You can get real surround help without permanently wiring your room like a dedicated theater, which is exactly the kind of compromise a lot of living rooms need.
At $617.45 instead of $899.95, you’re saving $282.50, and that feels like a very smart sale bracket. It’s much easier to justify than the near-$1,000-and-up flagships, but it still offers more excitement than an entry-level bar with a token subwoofer. If I were shopping for a family room or apartment where I wanted bigger movie-night energy without going all the way to a massive premium package, this is one of the models I’d be most tempted by. It has the kind of feature set that can make a deal feel meaningful rather than just mildly cheaper.

Sony’s BRAVIA Theater Bar 6 feels like a very deliberate “sweet spot” product. This one is a 3.1.2-channel soundbar with Dolby Atmos, DTS support, up-firing speakers, a dedicated center channel, and a wireless subwoofer. That combination tells me Sony is targeting buyers who want a clear step above TV sound and a real taste of height effects, but who don’t necessarily want rear speakers taking over the room. In other words, this is the kind of soundbar I’d recommend to someone who wants movie-friendly sound without committing to a full surround package.
Amazon's Big Spring Sale brings it from $699.99 to $548.00. That discount isn’t the most dramatic here, but I still think it matters because Sony tends to appeal to shoppers who value balance more than brute force.
A clean Sony TV-and-audio setup is easy to understand and easy to recommend, especially for people who care about dialogue clarity and straightforward living-room integration. It’s not the monster-value choice of this roundup, but it feels like one of the more sensible buys for people who want respectable Atmos performance in a cleaner, simpler package. Read our Sony BRAVIA Theater Bar 6 review.

The Polk Signa S4 is the sort of soundbar I like including in a roundup like this because not everybody needs a giant flagship system. Polk’s Signa S4 is a 3.1.2-channel Dolby Atmos bar with a wireless subwoofer, and Polk emphasizes its seven-driver array and up-firing speakers as the path to a more immersive presentation than you’d expect at this tier. To me, this reads like a classic practical upgrade: something you buy because your TV sounds flat and thin, but you still want a little more scale and dimension for movies and streaming.
At $379.00 instead of $449.00, it's not headline-grabbing next to the bigger cuts higher up the list, but the starting price matters. This is a far more approachable entry point than the four-figure systems above it, and I can see it being one of the easiest recommendations for shoppers who want Atmos without getting financially reckless during a sale event. If I were buying for a bedroom TV, smaller den, or mid-size living room where simplicity matters, the Signa S4 would absolutely be in the conversation.

The Sonos Beam Gen 2 remains one of the easiest soundbars to recommend because it understands exactly what it is. It is a compact smart soundbar with Dolby Atmos, HDMI eARC, voice control, AirPlay 2, Trueplay tuning, and the broader Sonos multi-room ecosystem. It is not trying to overwhelm you with physical speakers or giant subwoofers. Instead, it’s about clean design, easy setup, strong software, and sound that feels bigger and more precise than its size suggests.
This year's Amazon Big Spring Sale drops it from $499.00 to $369.00, and that makes a lot of sense for a product like this. The Beam Gen 2 is not the pick for somebody who wants chest-thumping bass and boxes everywhere. It’s for the buyer who wants a soundbar that looks good, works well, and can grow into a larger Sonos system later. Personally, I still think the Beam hits a very appealing middle ground between lifestyle product and real audio upgrade, and during a sale, that balance gets even easier to appreciate.

Not every soundbar deal should be judged on Atmos channels and room-shaking bass, and that’s exactly why the ZVOX AccuVoice AV855 belongs here. This model is a dialogue-focused soundbar with 20 levels of voice enhancement, dual built-in subwoofers, HDMI-ARC, and PhaseCue virtual surround processing. That makes it a very different kind of value proposition.
This is the soundbar for people who are tired of rewinding shows because the dialogue is muddy, not the one for people obsessing over helicopter flyovers in Atmos demo clips. At $299.99 instead of $349.99, the savings are modest, but I still think this is one of the more useful products in the entire roundup because it solves a very specific problem. Plenty of people, especially in mixed households, care far more about hearing voices clearly than they do about cinematic spectacle.
If that sounds familiar, I’d honestly place this higher on the practical-buy list than some of the more elaborate systems above. It’s not the most exciting sale item, but it may be the one that improves everyday TV watching the most for the right person. Read our full ZVOX AccuVoice AV855 review.

The Klipsch Flexus CORE 100 feels like the compact performance pick of the bunch. This beauty is a 2.1-channel soundbar powered by Onkyo, with virtual Dolby Atmos, dual 2.25-inch aluminum drivers, and dual 4-inch built-in subwoofers. The key phrase for me is “no subwoofer required.” That instantly makes this attractive for shoppers who want better bass and better scale than their TV can provide, but who do not want an extra box on the floor or a more complicated setup.
The price drop from $349.00 to $279.99 puts it right in the impulse-upgrade range for a lot of shoppers. I can see this appealing to apartment dwellers, office TV users, or anyone setting up a smaller media room where a giant soundbar package would feel excessive. It is also the kind of product that plays well with Klipsch’s brand identity: punchy, straightforward, and not overly fussy. If I wanted something small, neat, and likely more muscular than its size suggests, this would be one of the first models I’d click on.
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