In most cases, this means that it’s not color strength (color saturation) that needs adjustment, but more likely the brightness or gamma. In general, I have noticed that this washed out effect is a matter of insufficient luminance instead of chrominance. It is only meant to be a convenient and easy hack to bring your display back to a reasonable display quality when using the Windows 10 desktop environment. Note: This tutorial is not intended for display purists. ![]() The quickest way to resolve the post HDR washed-out effect is to adjust the HDR brightness to maximum and install an ICC color profile for your specific monitor. For myself, this is too much of a pain, and I decided to work on a solution myself that would avoid doing this. One common solution I found was toggling the HDR mode every time you wanted to view HDR content. Why I don’t recommend Microsoft’s Monitor Calibration Tool. ![]()
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