(no title)
robhlt
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2 months ago
"Filmmaker mode" is the industry's attempt at this. On supported TVs it's just another picture mode (like vivid or standard), but it disables all the junk the other modes have enabled by default without wading though all the individual settings. I don't know how widely adopted it is though, but my LG OLED from 2020 has it.
burnte|2 months ago
robhlt|2 months ago
mkozlows|2 months ago
(The trickiest thing is actually brightness. LG originally used to set brightness to 100 nits in Filmmaker Mode for SDR, which is correct dark room behavior -- but a lot of people aren't in dark rooms and want brighter screens, so they changed it to be significantly brighter. Defensible, but it now means that if you are in a dark room, you have to look up which brightness level is close to 100 nits.)
squeaky-clean|2 months ago
sethhochberg|2 months ago
Avamander|2 months ago
Game mode will indeed likely turn off any expensive latency-introducing processing but it's unlikely to provide the best color accuracy.
account42|1 month ago
jbaiter|2 months ago
kachapopopow|2 months ago
gchamonlive|2 months ago
Nihilartikel|2 months ago
It makes me wish that there was something like an industry standard 'calibrated' mode that everyone could target - let all the other garbage features be a divergence from that. Hell, there probably is, but they'd never suggest a consumer use that and not all of their value-add tackey DSP.
mkozlows|2 months ago
I'd suggest living with it for a while; if you do, you'll quickly get used to it, and then going to the "standard" (sic) setting will look too blue.