Denon AVR-S570BT vs Yamaha R-N2000A comparison definitely makes sense.
A significant difference between the receivers in the number of channels, Denon AVR-S570BT has 5.2 versus 2.1 for Yamaha R-N2000A. Regarding power, then AVR-S570BT has such a W/Ohm ratio - 70/8, 90/6 when R-N2000A has a power of 90/8, 145/4. The THD is 0.08% for the AVR-S570BT but 0.07% for the R-N2000A.
Competitors' digital to analog converter (DAC) is identical to 192 KHz/32-bit. Only the R-N2000A supports Bi-amping feature. Each of the AV receivers can transmit an audio signal directly to the amplifier and bypasses any DSP processing. Rivals from our review have Bluetooth support. Only the R-N2000A supports Spotify. Only the AVR-S570BT provides HDMI signal transmission in standby mode. The AVR-S570BT can scale the input HDMI signal, unlike the R-N2000A. Dolby Vision technology found support only on the AVR-S570BT. Only the AVR-S570BT supports HDMI Audio Return Channel (ARC). The HDMI eARC is available only on the AVR-S570BT. Of the two receivers in our comparison, HDMI CEC is present in only the AVR-S570BT. The R-N2000A has a built-in phono stage for connecting a vinyl player. It is also worth noting that the ECO mode is presented in each of the receivers. Both AVR-S570BT and R-N2000A can be configured using the Setup assistant.
None of the rivals equipped with Dolby Atmos multichannel audio decoder. The receivers do not support the surround sound technology DTS:X.