![]() Originally posted by □Dibelabbes:> I personally don't care for HDR on PC. Its a way bigger upgrade than ray tracing or anything else that came along visually in the past ten years. You video recording issue is simply the software not supporting HDR10, Shadowplay by Nvidia does for example now.ĭo yourself a favor and watch some HDR gameplay on a good TV or a really good monitor. If you turn on HDR in Windows it will upscale normal SDR content to the HDR color space which looks pretty bad, which is why you turn HDR only on to actually do something in HDR, like watching a HDR video or play a game (although many HDR games these days just switch to HDR automatically so you don't even need to switch it on in Windows). Also makes my monitor just look dull and lifeless when it's on. ![]() Videos don't record properly, screenshots look awful. > have a 4k HDR monitor and having HDR on just screws up everything in Windows. > Better off hoping your monitor is on rtings and use their calibrated settings to get the best out of your monitor.Ĭalibrating your monitor is a good idea in general but will not make SDR material at all look like HDR. Not a single HDR game on the OLED that doesn't look way improved and by now really most AAA titles coming out on PC support HDR. I recently upgraded to having an OLED TV (LG CX) connected to my PC and HDR looks just as good in games as those do on console (plus all the PC advantages in graphics of course). ![]() On that thing HDR was a mixed bag that sometimes improved visuals a bit but also dulled out the image unless I increased gamma and saturation manually. I did had a Samsung c32hg70 before that which had HDR600, 10 bit and was rtings HDR monitor of the year 2019 IIRC. Sorry but that is nonsense at least when it comes to gaming and vidoes.
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