Mans really went after OLED owners lol
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I know OLED is considered god's gift to man here but my prediction is that it will go the way of plasma. Microled ftw.
EDIT: OLED owners with your limp-dick 100nits sustained brightness please stay out of this thread. You cannot possibly understand or relate.
The difference is immediate too, you're eyes won't feel strain after gaming in a dark room.Everyone should use bias lighting behind their TV. It increases perceived contrast as well as reduces eyestrain especially in darker rooms.
This. I feel like HDR is just a stopgap handicap for the shortcomings of LCD tech. Still on Plasma dont give 2 shits about HDR.Yup, Don't need 2000 nits when you have inky blacks.
You mean Lcd will. OLED's will take LCD's place as the budget friendly option.I know OLED is considered god's gift to man here but my prediction is that it will go the way of plasma. Microled ftw.
I used to be a projector guy up until around 10 years ago but unfortunately TVs have rapidly advanced getting bigger and better while projectors have somewhat stagnated.Seriously, OP, this is why I'm building a home theater in the basement but it will be with projector. The light hitting the screen is a totally different feeling that light emission from a TV. The HDR nits race is ridiculous. I'll have a wall to wall 2.35:1 acoustic transparent screen so that my L-C-R speakers are uniform, same height and hidden behind screen.
Son with your OLED you got no idea what bright or even HDR means. Here is an example from a standard HDR 1000 LED to the left and the latest and greatest Samsung QD-OLED to the rightMy LG OLED77G26LA gets pretty bright.![]()
With the prevalence of HDR displays blasting gorgeous highlights and deep wide-gamut colours into our retinas I thought they would use some common sense.
In so many games and out of nowhere a pure white 100% coverage image is displayed for whatever stupid reason (loading, memory flashback etc.) and I have to rush and shield my eyes with my own hands just to save my retinas from melting down and into my keyboard.
Just stop.
EDIT: OLED owners with your limp-dick 100nits sustained brightness please stay out of this thread. You cannot possibly understand or relate.
I used to be a projector guy up until around 10 years ago but unfortunately TVs have rapidly advanced getting bigger and better while projectors have somewhat stagnated.
I agree with you though you can't beat projectors when it comes to natural feel as projector screens reflect light rather than emitting it which is how our eyes perceive the world.
I used to be a projector guy up until around 10 years ago but unfortunately TVs have rapidly advanced getting bigger and better while projectors have somewhat stagnated.
I agree with you though you can't beat projectors when it comes to natural feel as projector screens reflect light rather than emitting it which is how our eyes perceive the world.
Son with your OLED you got no idea what bright or even HDR means. Here is an example from a standard HDR 1000 LED to the left and the latest and greatest Samsung QD-OLED to the right
The only time you get a hint of HDR with an OLED is during 2% highlight scenes for example a night sky scene. Such scenes are rarer than unicorns and only last for a couple of seconds because there is not much to do by staring at a night sky.
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Of course not I'm not an OLED owner.
I used to be a projector guy up until around 10 years ago but unfortunately TVs have rapidly advanced getting bigger and better while projectors have somewhat stagnated.
I agree with you though you can't beat projectors when it comes to natural feel as projector screens reflect light rather than emitting it which is how our eyes perceive the world.
Son with your OLED you got no idea what bright or even HDR means. Here is an example from a standard HDR 1000 LED to the left and the latest and greatest Samsung QD-OLED to the right
The only time you get a hint of HDR with an OLED is during 2% highlight scenes for example a night sky scene. Such scenes are rarer than unicorns and only last for a couple of seconds because there is not much to do by staring at a night sky.
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Of course not I'm not an OLED owner.
Yeah it's pretty infuriating to have a full white screen as a loading on a HDR display, especially when I play in the dark and feel like I am about to become blind because of that shit.
HDR is not just about brightness though. It is also about showing more detail in the shadows. There is a reason why HDR is making its way to cinema screens as well, even though that has nothing to do with LCD screen tech.This. I feel like HDR is just a stopgap handicap for the shortcomings of LCD tech. Still on Plasma dont give 2 shits about HDR.
The past couple of years I've owned the following models: Acer X35, Acer X27, Asus Pg32uqx, Gigabyte FV43U, Dell 34 aw3423dwf qd-oled.JackSparr0w you still didn't tell us your TV model
HDR is not just about brightness though. It is also about showing more detail in the shadows. There is a reason why HDR is making its way to cinema screens as well, even though that has nothing to do with LCD screen tech.
I used to be a projector guy up until around 10 years ago but unfortunately TVs have rapidly advanced getting bigger and better while projectors have somewhat stagnated.
I agree with you though you can't beat projectors when it comes to natural feel as projector screens reflect light rather than emitting it which is how our eyes perceive the world.
Son with your OLED you got no idea what bright or even HDR means. Here is an example from a standard HDR 1000 LED to the left and the latest and greatest Samsung QD-OLED to the right
The only time you get a hint of HDR with an OLED is during 2% highlight scenes for example a night sky scene. Such scenes are rarer than unicorns and only last for a couple of seconds because there is not much to do by staring at a night sky.
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What do you expect when the sun hits a tree during a blue bird day? Ever been outside hiking? Bare in mind I would not game in such darkness and the photo is only to demonstrate how dull OLEDs are even with all the lights off.It's funny really as the image on the left has such overblown contrast that its literally crushing detail. Never go Vivid preset bruh
EDIT: OLED owners with your limp-dick 100nits sustained brightness please stay out of this thread. You cannot possibly understand or relate.
EDIT: OLED owners with your limp-dick 100nits sustained brightness please stay out of this thread. You cannot possibly understand or relate.
While the high contrast is true saying OLED is the best place to experience HDR is simply not truelimped dick oled owner here.
That said, OLED is still the best place to experience HDR because no other displays can have such high contrast.
The only reason you don't understand what I'm saying and many others have agreed with is because even my CRT from 1998 outperforms your OLED in terms of full screen brightness.limped dick oled owner here.
if HDR is blinding you then it's either your shitty ass display or the source hasn't implemented HDR properly.
older OLED models don't get as bright as other TVs but they still do a good job of HDR. more modern sets can do HDR no problem. That said, OLED is still the best place to experience HDR because no other displays can have such high contrast. Maybe when MicroLED comes out.
also, the only time OLEDs will run at "100nits" is sustained 100% windows. so if the entire screen is white. during 99% of scenes OLED can go to about 900 nits and max out at around 980nits. for HDR 1000 nits is the point where it's mastered. so not really a huge difference.
The past couple of years I've owned the following models: Acer X35, Acer X27, Asus Pg32uqx, Gigabyte FV43U, Dell 34 aw3423dwf qd-oled.
Current main display: Gigabyte FV43U, Secondary display: Acer X27.
The only reason you don't understand what I'm saying and many others have agreed with is because even my CRT from 1998 outperforms your OLED in terms of full screen brightness.
I put a warning in the OP after the first OLED fangirls started showing up uninvited as usual for a reason.
The Lcd shortcoming i was refrencing was the black levels (shadow detail). Most cinemas cheap out on even standard light levels so it would be very unlikely They would adopt a more expensive model.HDR is not just about brightness though. It is also about showing more detail in the shadows. There is a reason why HDR is making its way to cinema screens as well, even though that has nothing to do with LCD screen tech.