F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming The brightness comes from the screen, not your eyes.

The brightness comes from the screen, not your eyes.

The brightness comes from the screen, not your eyes.

N
nicjohn2000
Member
149
10-31-2016, 03:59 PM
#1
20 mark.
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nicjohn2000
10-31-2016, 03:59 PM #1

20 mark.

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sniperboy650
Senior Member
735
11-04-2016, 04:35 PM
#2
Your display looks a bit too bright compared to my phone's OLED. Consider switching to standard mode. Could be the Vibrance setting was set too high in Nvidia CP?
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sniperboy650
11-04-2016, 04:35 PM #2

Your display looks a bit too bright compared to my phone's OLED. Consider switching to standard mode. Could be the Vibrance setting was set too high in Nvidia CP?

V
VenomousCoCo
Junior Member
8
11-04-2016, 04:53 PM
#3
Seems typical in the clip, likely due to your color adjustments.
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VenomousCoCo
11-04-2016, 04:53 PM #3

Seems typical in the clip, likely due to your color adjustments.

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SamaMonster
Member
178
11-11-2016, 05:57 PM
#4
You either enjoy your video games a lot or your screen brightness is lower than usual. The visuals appear very vivid on my Apple Studio Display and iPhone. That makes sense—it’s not your issue. The uploader’s settings are excessively bright. Keep some common sense: If one video or creator seems poorly made compared to the vast amount of content you’ve seen before, is it really your monitor? A practical test would be to check with a smartphone, whose LCD/OLED panel is likely the most accurate and colorful display available. To put it simply, Samsung phones can sometimes make their screens look overly bright, which may affect color accuracy.
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SamaMonster
11-11-2016, 05:57 PM #4

You either enjoy your video games a lot or your screen brightness is lower than usual. The visuals appear very vivid on my Apple Studio Display and iPhone. That makes sense—it’s not your issue. The uploader’s settings are excessively bright. Keep some common sense: If one video or creator seems poorly made compared to the vast amount of content you’ve seen before, is it really your monitor? A practical test would be to check with a smartphone, whose LCD/OLED panel is likely the most accurate and colorful display available. To put it simply, Samsung phones can sometimes make their screens look overly bright, which may affect color accuracy.

I
Imorrivel
Member
60
11-11-2016, 06:21 PM
#5
You own an LG product.
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Imorrivel
11-11-2016, 06:21 PM #5

You own an LG product.