LostDonkey
Member
Sea of thieves
Nope. No HDR for Ghost Recon Wildlands on PC.Does Ghost Recon: Wildlands support HDR on PC? That one is overlooked a bunch, but is a stunner on my 70" 4k HDR.
Ass Creed Origins is beautiful too. Forza Horizon 4 as well.
You dare summon me here?! Anyway - HDR games eh? I think before I even start recommending games I want to know what genres you are most interested inkeraj37 .
Off the top of my head though...
Witness
Hitman 1/2
Shadow Warrior 2
Resident Evil 7
Obduction
Half-Life 2
Mass Effect Andromeda
Anthem
Battlefield 4/1/5
Dragon Age Inquisition
No Man's Sky
Bayonetta
https://pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/Special:Ask/-5B-5BCategory:Games-5D-5D-20-5B-5Bhigh_dynamic_range::true-5D-5D-20OR-20-5B-5Bhigh_dynamic_range::hackable-5D-5D/-3FDeveloped-20by/-3FPublished-20by/-3FRelease-20date/-3FAvailable-20on/-3Fhigh_dynamic_range/format=template/limit=100/template=Feature-2Frow/introtemplate=Feature-2Fintro/outrotemplate=Feature-2Foutro
It's hard to know how the engines work internally, but the gist of it is: there are engines that work at >8 bits/channel, compressing the end result to 8 bits, and those could work wonderfully with HDR. However, if you're already working with 8 bits, there's no extra information to be had, so any kind of HDR is just an approximation.Good to know! I was kind of disappointed CDR left PC to die but now I understand they actually did the same to everyone.
RDR2 HDR is abysmal.
Do you know if it's the same for Spider Man? God of War's support was way better.
The switch? I don't think the switch is even capable of outputting hdr because of hdmi 1.4 output.The one I used to try out HDR was Shadow of Colossus remake.
Basically any Sony exclusive, that is if you have a PS4.
On the Switch, I tweaked with Super Mario Odyssey.
They really need to add a toggle for hdr in game bar or something. That way you aren't always on hdr, and you don't have to go into menus to turn it on.My best experiences with HDR on PC so far are:
BFV
BF1
Shadow of War
Nex Machina
Asscreed Origins
Witcher 3 does not support HDR on PC. It's a beautiful game but for some reason CD Projekt decided not to release on PC. It works on consoles, though.
HDR support on the Windows Desktop is a bit of a hassle. You need to turn it on, change resolutions to something else and then go back to the resolution you want to display (ideally native resolution). It doesn't make that much of a difference on the desktop.
This is a good one I forgot about.Sea of thieves
It depends how big your tv is and how far you sit from it. HDR is more noticeable to me, but then again I have a 75 inch and sit 10 feet away, so i'm very close to that point where you can't actually notice the difference in 4k. If I get like say 6 feet away it's definitely noticeable. HDR is most apparent in darker scenes that have really bright objects.I'm convinced people loving HDR is partly placebo. No layperson I've ever asked can see the difference. Even on a hardcore gaming forum, a rare context where people would pay attention to such things, one of the first suggestions was Mario Odyssey, a non-HDR game on a non-HDR console!
I find the difference extremely subtle even on the games people recommended here (HZD on PS4 Pro, and so on). The colors get a little more muted/subtle in HDR mode, and that's about it. The leap from 1080 to 4K (even reconstructed) is vastly more noticeable.
Well, first of all, as with any emerging technology, there's HDR and then there's "HDR". A TV may technically support HDR, as in it wont bork if it receives a HDR signal, but is still unable to display it properly. A 10bit native panel is a must, and also 1000+ nits if the TV is not OLED.
I got nothing I'm afraid. HDR on PC seems a bit more wild west than on console, though I've not been following it super closely.Most welcome. Sorry I'm not experienced in PC yet but I'm sure the top lads here @Damage IncShifty @JuiceboxHero will help you
You may be right - I hope it is not 50Hz as I bought it also cause 100Hz was clearly noted in the offer. Also this TV was widely recommended for PC so hard to believe it has less then 60 Hz.
Yeah, the banding implies that you have an 8-bit panel. Basically, the source is trying to output 10 bits/channel, but your TV is unable to display that, so you get banding. In SDR there are (2^8)^3 colours available, that is 16777216. But with 10 bits that becomes (2^10)^3, 1073741824 different colours (in theory, at least). It is really annoying with these emerging technologies that you can end up with something that's not really there, but such is life.This is fair. I'm playing on one of the first generations of 4K TVs, circa early 2015. It's HDR capable, but I'm assuming the technology has improved since then, if people like it so much. HDR just makes the colors look *different,* not better. Generally speaking it makes games subtler and less saturated. The default PS4 menu goes from a bright blue to more of a muted cyan, for example. Turning on HDR also introduces color banding on smooth gradients, which is annoying.
So, I bought 4k HDR TV (LG 43UK6300 4K UHD HDR 100 Hz) and was wondering which games are best to experience HDR?
Please let me know if you know any.
I know this sounds trivial but did you check the in game settings for brightness? I know I ran into the problem you had but when I checked the in game brightness they were way off from what I had originally set. Maybe an update did it? Not sure but now destiny 2 looks great.
Haven't read any bullshit today. Now I did.On the Switch, I tweaked with Super Mario Odyssey.
I think that cloud gaming is only a loss in the highly flexible PC space, not so much in the tightly curated console space
Ratchet and Clank (this one literally transforms in HDR)
GOW
HZD
Uncharted 4
Detroit Become Human
Horizon Zero Dawn has the best use of HDR I've seen so far.
The Witcher 3.
Kinda limited really, cause all the games that I hear really push HDR are on PS4.
I'll ask my brother for his opinion, as he is a PC gamer and get back later...
Link me to any TV that operates at 200Hz at 4K .Couldn't even tell you the last time I seen a 50hz TV, my guess is it would be a minimum 100Hz. Every TV I've gotten for the last few years has been 200Hz. Different price range I'm sure but I doubt anything under 100Hz you should be safe.
Why do people keep mentioning PS games did they even read the thread.
Link me to any TV that operates at 200Hz at 4K .
Looks like some latest 2019 Samsung models are finally capable of displaying 4K 120Hz, but still are limited to 8bit 4:2:0 chroma as there's still no HDMI 2.1 sources currently and TV sadly doesn't have DP to test it's full capabilities with a PC. [2080ti only has HDMI 2.0 not 2.1]![]()
Samsung Series 7 Q75R 75" 4K UHD QLED TV
Sporting such features as Richer black levels for colours that come alive, SAMSUNG have created another winner. Buy online or instore today at JB Hi-Fiwww.jbhifi.com.au
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Series 7 75" Q75R QLED 4K TV* | Samsung AU
Samsung 2019 4K QLED, Q70R. Meet advanced contrast with Direct Full Array 4x. 2019 new Samsung QLED TV brings dark and light to life.www.samsung.com
Unless that 200hz is just at 1080p but can't see any disclaimers or advertising to make it seem so but I'm not knowledgable enough on TV's to claim the word of Samsung as that of truth.
Forced HDR is never for the better. The TV's own built in "Fake HDR" worsens image quality and isn't a represenation of what the image is supposed to look like. So basically it's not HDR at all. And you have no idea what you are talking about.Yap, you're right. But I can "force" HDR on any game with my TV.
It's not really HDR, since the game does not support thought. I notice some differences (for the better) if I use it, but nothing outstanding to be honest.
On the switch I mainly tweaked with this since I heard that on my TV this would result in a higher input lag, but honestly I didn't spot any difference while using HLG HDR. The game looked nicer to me, so I kept the setting on, despite the game being non HDR.
Forced HDR is never for the better. The TV's own built in "Fake HDR" worsens image quality and isn't a represenation of what the image is supposed to look like. So basically it's not HDR at all.
AFAIK the only Samsung TV with HDMI 2.1 is their 8K Q900, but it's only 60FPS.Looks like some latest 2019 Samsung models are finally capable of displaying 4K 120Hz, but still are limited to 8bit 4:2:0 chroma as there's still no HDMI 2.1 sources currently and TV sadly doesn't have DP to test it's full capabilities with a PC. [2080ti only has HDMI 2.0 not 2.1]
From the review here: https://www.rtings.com/tv/discussions/exqRBUgajCQcQGfK/4k-120hz-details
You may be right - I hope it is not 50Hz as I bought it also cause 100Hz was clearly noted in the offer. Also this TV was widely recommended for PC so hard to believe it has less then 60 Hz.
So I'm guessing OP's TV will be able to do 1080p 120Hz and 4K 60Hz. Also before 2019 all those 120 Hz TV were only capable of 1920x1080 120Hz and only some highest end 2560x1440 120Hz. Never 4K 120 Hz.You don't have to worry about this. In Europe they advertise TVs as 50/100 Hz, but every modern "50 Hz" TV is actually 60 Hz. Every. Single. One. Ditto every "100 Hz" TV is actually 120 Hz (although it might be "fake" 100/120 and not capable of native 120 Hz). But if the TV advertises as 200+ Hz it's gonna be totally fake and bullshit. The highest frame rate I've seen a TV do natively is 120 Hz.
Looks like some latest 2019 Samsung models are finally capable of displaying 4K 120Hz, but still are limited to 8bit 4:2:0 chroma as there's still no HDMI 2.1 sources currently and TV sadly doesn't have DP to test it's full capabilities with a PC. [2080ti only has HDMI 2.0 not 2.1]
From the review here: https://www.rtings.com/tv/discussions/exqRBUgajCQcQGfK/4k-120hz-details
You don't have to worry about this. In Europe they advertise TVs as 50/100 Hz, but every modern "50 Hz" TV is actually 60 Hz. Every. Single. One. Ditto every "100 Hz" TV is actually 120 Hz (although it might be "fake" 100/120 and not capable of native 120 Hz). But if the TV advertises as 200+ Hz it's gonna be totally fake and bullshit. The highest frame rate I've seen a TV do natively is 120 Hz.
Thanks for consolation. I wonder then why they false advertise as with lower specs. Strange.