Quote:
Originally Posted by INdetectableMAN
HDR is not darker, it is the displays who do not treat HDR10 signals correctly.
When I see a movie edited in the three formats starting from the same master, DVD, BLURAY and ULTRAHD, I see the same movie edited at three different levels of compression where the ULTRAHD is the one with the least compression, therefore, it is technically the one best image quality will present.
Bluray is nothing more than a compressed version in all aspects (resolution, dynamic range, color space, bpp ...) of the good, the UHD.
If you do not see correctly unforgives, not look at the edition, raise the change of display because surely your display does not meet the minimum specifications necessary for the correct representation of UHD images
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While I agree with your sentiment - it's the display implementation of HDR10 that's 'broken' - it's worth bearing in mind that UHD is MASSIVELY compressed from what the masters are. A 10-bit 2K source is about 2TB while a 10-bit 4K source is 8TB, and even taking into account the increased 100GB capacity of UHD discs it should be obvious that UHD is in fact much more heavily compressed than the Blu-ray equivalent. That we get such impressive images out of it is down to the increased efficiency of the HEVC codec.