Govee RGBIC Light Bars Review: Worth It for 45-70 Inch TVs?

Govee RGBIC Light Bars, 15 Inches WiFi TV Backlight Suitable for 45-70 inch TVs, Smart Light Bars with Multiple Placement Options, Work with Alexa and Google Assistant, Black
Govee
- Created For 45-70 Inch TV: Bring your entertainment, movies, and gaming to life with the Govee RGBIC TV Light Bars. Use with the Govee Home App to control your light bars remotely or brighten your walls with preset scene modes and music modes.
- RGBIC Effects: Enjoy RGBIC lighting effects for your TV. With the included back buckles, the TV light bars can be rotated freely up to 90°, allowing for a wider spread of the lighting effects. The light bars don't have a color-matching function.
- Smart Voice Control: Use your voice assistant devices to turn your lights on and off, change scene modes, and more with Smart Voice Control. Pair your TV light bars with Alexa and Google Assistant to enjoy hands-free voice control.
- 8+ Dynamic Music Modes: Turn your lights into a dance party using Music Mode on Govee Home App. Choose from 8 diverse music modes to create a lively party scene for your space.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- RGBIC technology displays multiple colors simultaneously for vibrant ambient effects
- Flexible mounting with brackets, vertical stands, or horizontal placement without hardware
- Hands-free voice control via Alexa and Google Assistant
- Music sync mode with 8+ dynamic patterns for parties and gaming sessions
- Works with 45-70 inch TVs — covers most standard and large-screen setups
- WiFi connectivity allows remote app control without needing line-of-sight
Cons
- No automatic color-matching with on-screen content — bars don't sync to what you're watching
- App requires account creation, which some users may find intrusive
- Power adapter and cables are visible once installed, affecting clean aesthetics
- Single USB power source may limit brightness compared to dedicated AC-powered alternatives
Quick Verdict
The Govee RGBIC Light Bars deliver vivid ambient lighting that genuinely elevates evening TV sessions without complicated setup. After a week of real-world testing, the combination of RGBIC color effects, responsive voice control, and flexible mounting options earns these a 4.5 out of 5 — especially for viewers who want to reduce eye strain from direct screen glare.
What Is the Govee RGBIC Light Bars?
The Govee RGBIC Light Bars are smart LED backlighting designed to mount behind your television, casting ambient color onto the wall behind it. Unlike traditional single-color backlight strips, the RGBIC technology lets each LED segment display a different color simultaneously — creating those smooth gradient sweeps you're probably familiar with from gaming setups. They're built for 45-70 inch screens, which covers most standard living-room TVs and a good chunk of larger displays too.

What makes these stand out from cheaper alternatives is the combination of RGBIC effects, WiFi-based app control, and compatibility with both Alexa and Google Assistant. The package includes everything you need for three different mounting styles: brackets you can stick behind the TV, two vertical stands, and the option to lay the bars horizontally on a shelf without any hardware at all. I appreciate that flexibility — not every setup works the same way.
Key Features
- RGBIC technology displays multiple colors at once across the light bar segments
- Designed for 45-70 inch TVs — the sweet spot for most households
- Works with Alexa and Google Assistant for hands-free voice control
- 8+ music sync modes that react to ambient audio via the Govee Home app
- Three mounting methods: TV brackets, vertical stands, or horizontal shelf placement
- 90° rotation via the back buckles to optimize light spread for your room layout
- WiFi connectivity for remote app control without a hub
Hands-On Review
I unboxed the Govee RGBIC Light Bars on a Thursday evening — rainy, dim kitchen lighting, the whole mood. Setting them up took about twenty minutes, mostly because I fussed with cable management behind my TV instead of just letting the power adapter dangle. From a clean desk to Netflix, it was closer to thirty. The included back brackets stuck firmly on the first try, which isn't something I can say about every adhesive product on Amazon.

By the second night, I'd switched from the default rainbow cycle to a custom scene that pulses through cool blues and muted purples — it pairs nicely with documentary content and doesn't distract during dialogue-heavy shows. The app interface is surprisingly polished. Scene previews show you exactly what you're selecting, and grouping controls let you manage multiple Govee devices from one screen. I did hit a brief WiFi hiccup on day three — the bars dropped offline for about ninety seconds before reconnecting automatically. Annoying, but not a dealbreaker.
The RGBIC effect itself looks best in darker rooms. In a bright living room during the day, the ambient glow gets washed out by natural light. That's obvious in hindsight, but it's worth noting if your TV room gets a lot of sun. At night, though, the gradient sweeps across my wall are genuinely pretty — especially during sci-fi films where the on-screen lighting already leans colorful.

Voice control through Alexa worked without a single misfire. "Alexa, turn off the TV lights" — done. "Alexa, set the living room lights to movie mode" — also done, though I had to name that scene explicitly in the app first. Google Assistant pairing took about two minutes and behaved identically.
Here's the thing nobody mentions in the listings: the music sync mode is genuinely fun for parties, but it's almost too energetic for everyday TV watching. The bars react to ambient sound from your phone mic, so if you're watching something quiet, the lights still flutter at the loudest bass hit. I mostly left it off unless I had friends over. Which, fine — it's there when you want it.
What surprised me was the eye-strain angle. I didn't expect to notice it, but after a few evenings with the ambient glow filling the peripheral space behind my screen, bright scenes felt slightly less harsh. That's anecdotal, but it's the kind of benefit the EyeCase audience specifically cares about. The cool-tone scenes feel particularly effective at softening contrast spikes during horror movies — your pupils aren't working as hard against total darkness.
Who Should Buy It?
- TV viewers who spend 3+ hours nightly in front of the screen and want to reduce eye fatigue
- Home theater enthusiasts looking for a budget-friendly way to add cinematic atmosphere
- Smart home users who already run Alexa or Google Assistant throughout their house
- Gamers who want RGB ambient lighting that syncs with music or reactive audio
Skip this if your TV falls outside the 45-70 inch range — the light spread won't cover the wall space effectively. Also skip it if you prefer pitch-black viewing environments for movies; the ambient glow will definitely register in a dark room. And if you specifically want color-matching that syncs with on-screen content, these aren't the right product — look at the Philips Hue Play or Govee's ownflow bias strips instead.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Philips Hue Play Light Bars — Superior color-matching via the Hue Sync box, deeper ecosystem integration, but roughly twice the price for a comparable setup.
- Govee RGBICW LED Strip Lights — More flexible for curved TVs or irregular layouts, but require more involved installation and no music sync out of the box.
- Lytmix A22 TV Backlights — Budget option with camera-based color capture, though accuracy varies and the setup feels more finicky.
FAQ
They're designed for 45-70 inch televisions. TVs smaller than 45 inches may not benefit from the light spread, and TVs larger than 70 inches may not receive adequate ambient coverage.
Final Verdict
The Govee RGBIC Light Bars hit a practical sweet spot: they're affordable enough to feel like a casual purchase, but polished enough in execution that you won't resent the impulse later. RGBIC effects look great in low light, voice control is reliable, and the three mounting options cover most real living rooms. The lack of automatic color-matching is the most obvious trade-off, but if you're buying ambient backlighting rather than screen-synced bias lighting, that's probably not why you're here anyway. I'd keep these installed. For most viewers with 45-70 inch screens who want to soften their viewing environment without dropping $150+ on a system, these are easy to recommend.