Samsung Team announce Their first monitors will support the HDR10+ gaming standard, an extended version of HDR10 geared toward games that can also be automatically calibrated. It was HDR10 + Gaming Advertise early In October, Samsung revealed that its new 2022 lineup of QLED TVs (Q70 and above) and gaming monitors will be the first to support this standard.
Samsung has partnered with Saber Interactive to bring HDR10+ support to Castle 2 e Pinball FX, which will be shown at CES 2022 (as long as the game developer never give upIn addition, Game Mechanic Studios will get the title of HDR10 + games Happy arcade and kidnapped princess in Earth.
The games promoted by Samsung contrast with the main games available on the competition level: Dolby Vision games – all inclusive infinite aurae gears 5, Which Call of Duty: Cold War Black Ops. Xbox Series X e S. Already supported No less than ten games in Dolby Vision.
HDR10+ Gaming has more visual metadata than regular HDR10 (targets four times maximum brightness), supports Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) and Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM) for better visuals and visual gaming performance. Samsung also claims that the standard will work “above 120Hz,” but it doesn’t go into details.
The rival standard, Dolby Vision Gaming, actually does all of this (except for its claim of 120Hz or more). In addition, Samsung’s competitor LG announce OLED C1 and G1 displays with Dolby Vision gaming standards in June this year.
The full HDR10+ experience, like Dolby Vision, is only viable if the entire configuration is vertically integrated to support the format. This means that to experience HDR10+ gaming, your PC will need an Nvidia graphics card (with future support for GeForce RTX 30 Series, RTX 20 Series, and GTX 16 Series GPU), a game programmed with additional visual metadata, and a new Samsung O-display can take off.
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