![]() ![]() ![]() Hogwarts Legacy allowed me to dip into the Wizarding World and give the franchise another go. I’ve watched a couple of the films, but I can’t say I’m that much of a fan. What could easily have been just a cash grab turns out to be a rather good and fully-featured role-playing game.Īside from that which I’m obliged to know as a parent, I’m not that familiar with Harry Potter and the associated books and movies. We're on this edge where games are still coming out with HDR adjustment settings when they don't need to, they just need to assume 1000 nits, but because Windows 10 is still very prevalent, they give people those controls anyway.Fans of Harry Potter’s Wizarding World, and newcomers alike, get the AAA role-playing game experience with Hogwarts Legacy. HDR in gaming, and HDR in general, is a bit of a weird field right now. Windows would assume everything is being presented in 1000 nits and bump up the brightness, blowing out your bright spots, which you don't want. But let's say you set it to 1170 in-game anyway. This gives you the truest representation of what the graphic artists wanted you to see. If you're getting 1170, Windows will take the 1000 nit peak brightness and automagically turn it up to 1170, bumping up everything else along the way. What you want to do is always set games to 1000 nits and then let Windows and your display tone map the 1000 nit signal it's receiving to the maximum luminance of the display. With games, and with HDR in general, everything is mastered at 1000 nits. ![]() I would then rerun the calibration tool and save that profile. If that is the Medium setting then that's what *I* would do. So what I would do, and this is strictly my own personal tastes, I'd set it to whatever will give you the highest maximum luminance. ![]()
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