
"TVs from Samsung and any other manufacturers who support it will be able to boost picture brightness for 4,000-5,000 nit TVs that have hit the market, adapt the image to specific genres, control the level of motion smoothing, improve visual performance of streamed games and adapt to ambient light conditions, have improved tone mapping for different areas of the screen, and more precise color control."
"The format will need support from streaming services for viewers to actually experience these benefits, though. Amazon Prime Video is on board, but considering it took until this year for Netflix and Disney to support the original HDR10 Plus that had been in use since 2018, we'll see how long it is until they add HDR10 Plus Advanced."
Samsung demonstrated a simulated HDR10 Plus Advanced implementation that brings six dynamic HDR capabilities comparable to Dolby Vision 2. Supported TVs can boost peak brightness for 4,000–5,000-nit displays, adapt image processing by genre, control motion smoothing level, improve streamed game visuals, adapt to ambient light, and apply improved localized tone mapping with finer color control. Streaming service support is required for viewers to receive these enhancements. Amazon Prime Video has committed support, while wider adoption may be delayed as major services were slow to adopt the original HDR10 Plus.
Read at The Verge
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