bntran02

Member
Jun 7, 2011
87
1
66
Information on this is a little hard to find but it seems that HDR is focused mostly on games. Games is only < 5% of my use case.

What I do on a regular basis:
  1. Photoshop/light room for semi-professional photography.
  2. Watching youtube/netflix (though, most of it is on my phone)
  3. General business tasks: Word, excel, taxes, payroll, contracts, etc...
Is there any benefit to my use case?
 

pj-

Senior member
May 5, 2015
481
249
116
I'd say wait a couple years until HDR settles down, becomes more streamlined, and has more content. I wouldn't trust current HDR monitors to do it very well anyway.

In a few years it will probably be close to standard on monitors.
 

nathanddrews

Graphics Cards, CPU Moderator
Aug 9, 2016
965
534
136
www.youtube.com
1. Only if you are producing/editing real HDR images
2. Only if you watch HDR videos from YouTube and Netflix
3. None that I can think of
 

moonbogg

Lifer
Jan 8, 2011
10,635
3,095
136
I think to do HDR right you need OLED. PC monitors aren't there yet anyway, so there's really no good option for an HDR monitor unless you buy a TV IMO.
 

Rifter

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
11,522
751
126
Wait untill they come up with a real standard before going HDR on a monitor. Or buy a TV and use it as a monitor.
 

kami

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
17,627
5
81
I don't think there's much benefit for you outside of using HDR for non-PC stuff. There's no traditional monitor-sized options out there right now. HDR is only worth it if you buy either an OLED tv (expensive) or a higher end LED TV which can achieve high peak brightness and has local dimming. 90% of the TVs that advertise HDR aren't really doing HDR justice at all. 49 inches is about the smallest you can get that produces a good HDR picture.

As for your uses, the main benefit is for video watching right now (Netflix and Amazon streaming supports HDR on some titles, and 4K Blu-rays). There's a handful of PC games that support HDR but some of them are broken thanks to windows 10 updates. Windows 10 is handling HDR horribly to be honest. Xbox One X and PS4 Pro also have some HDR games.
 
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bntran02

Member
Jun 7, 2011
87
1
66
Welp,

Looks like the benefit, for me, is minimal to non-existent and I should spend the cash in other areas.

Thanks for the replies!