![]() ![]() The specific brightness/contrast/gamma/color settings needed to make the default game settings look good on a particular monitor might make that same monitor look horrible for general use like web browsing, so having to go into your monitors menus to mess with those settings every time you launch the game and then back into those menus to reverse those changes every time you finish is a stupid thing to expect people to do, especially when the game could instead apply those settings only to itself far easier, leaving your monitors settings calibrated for general use as they should be. Sure I get that there are people who will exploit gamma correction to be able to easily see in the dark, but for some people not having the option of gamma correction may mean not being able to see in the dark AT ALL, even in circumstances where someone with a more expensive monitor might be able to see just fine even without a How is having a feature like gamma correction ever a downgrade?Įven people with similar monitors won't necessarily have them calibrated the same, and the average player shouldn't be forced to mess with their monitor settings to make the game look good when it would be far easier to have those options in the game just like the vast majority of other so-called Triple-A games do. The problem, and one that a lot of the people saying that the brightness at night is fine as it is seem to be utterly oblivious to, is that not everyone has the same quality TV/monitor, some people might be playing on a screen that isn't capable of displaying the differences between very dark shades as well as others, that's why gamma correction sliders in videogames exist in the first place. There is a difference between something being dark and something being totally indistinguishably black. ![]() No, but my pupils do automatically dilate to take in as much of the available light as possible, I'd expect not to be able to see anything in TOTAL darkness but if I still couldn't see anything in a moonlit twilight then I'd be booking an appointment with my optician. I don't know why my gamma keeps changing when I come out of standby but its extremely annoying and the calibration takes too much time for me to do it everytime.I don’t imagine this will go down well but when its nighttime at home and all the lights are off, do you go inside the settings of your eyeballs and tweak the gamma? I set 'use nvidia settings' so everytime I come out of standby, the values here do not change but I know what is shown is not what is set so if I just move the "gamma" slider up then back down to the exact same value, the gamma is fixed on the screen and now is truly the value shown in the slider. other applications control color settings ![]() There is a tab that says Choose how color is set if I right click on the desktop and go to NVIDIA Settings > Display > Adjust desktop color settings.The issue is everytime I come out of standby the gamma goes to a super high value every time and everything is washed and I only have two ways to fix it When I calibrate it using the color calibrator (Pantone XRite software) the color looks pretty great. I have the W520 Lenovo Laptop with the Color Calibrator (not sure if the software is the culprit). ![]()
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