Roku has ripped out sound leveling and night mode options from most TV's with built-in Roku's in a an attempt to sell more soundbar products, which will magically re-enable those options on the TV interfaces that used to be native. Not ironically, , The Roku Channel (the whole lineup from what I can tell) is the most obnoxious - commercials are 75% higher than the programming itself.
So KMA, Roku. They're dead to me.
Do any of the Android TV's or box/dongles have a visible/docuemntable option/feature for sound leveling? I do not "do" loud sounds. The Stones concert last month was almost perfect from 11 miles away :-)
I don't see any mention of it for android TV sets or for add on boxes, just epnty of articles about how to change the volunme on Android devices. But I also don't see any complaints related the lack of such an option, either. So maybe it's all doing its thing enabled and not apparent to the users. AFAICT, it's all software-based regar4dles of audio output method protocol/hardware or built in speakers.
OTOH, youtube (and Widows in general) sucks at volume changes from one stream to another, and so are Android smart phones doing stuff other than youtube. And Google i pretty progrssive when it come to "Lusers don't need options, we'll make up their minds for them".
I'll probabkly drop the $20 on the Onn 4K thing in the next few days. But I don't expect that to be representitive of other probably more quality devices - just to touch and feel the Android TV interface.
There's really not much out there right now among Android TV devices that's better than the $20 Onn 4K except the MUCH more expensive Nvidia Shield TV. The $50 Chromecast with Google TV is better only in that it has the slightly different Google TV home screen (actually, some would say it's worse than the standard Android TV homescreen on the Onn) plus support for Dolby Vision and Atmos. Oh, it also has a USB-C port rather than a micro-USB port like the Onn. But the hardware itself isn't any more advanced otherwise. In fact, I'd say that the Onn is slightly snappier and less buggy.