Your monitor’s HDR settings are almost certainly wrong on Windows
Whenever my gaming friends tell me that HDR looks bad on Windows, I usually ask a simple follow-up question: "Did you actually calibrate it?" Most of the time, the answer is no. And honestly, I get it. HDR on Windows isn't exactly all that straightforward, even though it seems that way in the settings app. You flip the HDR toggle, expecting cinematic highlights and deeper contrast, and instead get a washed-out desktop, making you wonder if it's all worth the trouble for a couple of HDR videos or a handful of supported games.
Whenever my gaming friends tell me that HDR looks bad on Windows, I usually ask a simple follow-up question: “Did you actually calibrate it?” Most of the time, the answer is no. And honestly, I get it. HDR on Windows isn’t exactly all that straightforward, even though it seems that way in the settings app. You flip the HDR toggle, expecting cinematic highlights and deeper contrast, and instead get a washed-out desktop, making you wonder if it’s all worth the trouble for a couple of HDR videos or a handful of supported games.
Jane Smith
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Published by: aplhsindia.in
