It's not at all inadequate. As long as there are a decent number of dimming zones, FALD produces great results. First-gen Mini LED backlighting in Samsung QLED TVs is producing near OLED black uniformity already, and the eventual transition to Micro LED will take things one step further.lol @ largely.
Contrast needed for "impactful HDR" is inadequate on LCDs, thats why FALD exists, which introduces issues of its own.
"Game changing" OLEDs are on borrowed time, just like Plasmas. The drawbacks are not at all worth the benefits.
"HDR gaming" gives precedence to other factors like input lag and response time, which matter more for gaming. These reviews don't, however, factor 30fps gaming, which is terrible on 120Hz OLED TVs.I mean, Vincent, Digital Foundry and Rtings ALL seem to disagree with you here. As the best HDR gaming TVs they recommend happen to be OLEDs
I mean, if he's showing people that OLEDs do need to be brighter, and is using LCDs to support his claim, that says it all really lol. He's very clear about it:Dude made a video for people who are saying OLED's don't need to get any brighter than they are today. Dude also says the "holy grail" is 4,000 nits. Does your X90H do that? Hell no. Dude is probably going to keep dropping that "fact" until TVs reach that value
At peak brightness on OLEDs, much of the highlights are lost. With dynamic tone-mapping (HGIG), highlights are preserved but the overall brightness is lowered. The Sony XH90 only clips minor highlights (it doesn't support HGIG) while retaining peak brightness. Samsung TVs are even better, as they do support HGIG and retain peak brightness."Peak brightness on current consumer OLEDs is not enough to accurately reproduce the true creative intent of HDR content, not only in terms of brightness but also in terms of detail."
Besides stating the "holy grail", he also mentioned that "the majority of content is graded to 1000 nits". Does my X90H do that? It's close enough. Do Samsung TVs do this? They surpass it considerably. The mini LED QLED TV I linked above reaches almost 2000 nits. LOLED
Think again, who did and who didn'tYou didn't even understand the point of the "dude's" video. "Dude" ko decade se follow kar rahe ho par seekha kuch bhi nahi
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