QuoteHowever, this also means that there are no true blacks in SDR mode, but rather a very dark grey with some minor backlight bleeding.
It's quite funny to read this opus from the author against the background of ordinary 1000-1200:1 in most laptops, where nevertheless they are given more than 80% points for the screen.
Where is it, even on a glossy 3000:1+ screen with an IPS pixel structure, if only VA panels are capable of this, which are fundamentally not used in laptops?
And 3600:1+ is 3 times better than Legion 7 "Pro" 2023. If there is "very dark gray", then what is on the L7"Pro" screen with declared 1200:1 - such a screen together with a laptop should definitely be sent to the trash can? And Asus laptops with only 1000:1-1100:1 in 17.3"-18" models 2023 - also in the trash right away?
And again, the authors of NB deliberately do not measure contrast at different brightness levels. And as bloggers-reviewers on YouTube proved, in this regard, not everything is good on different panels. There are panels where the contrast drops significantly at medium and low brightness, compared to panel models from other manufacturers. For example, panels from CSOT were noticed behind such a defect in comparison with BOE in Legion 5 Pro.
Well, "no true blacks in SDR mode" looks generally ridiculous against the background of AMOLED, although even there, as it turned out, with real contrast, not everything is good in many models, despite marketing declarations of 1M:1 and higher, i.e. there, too, it turns out "gray", and not "true black".
H
alos around contrasting objects at the borders of the zones did not share anywhere on a crutch called miniLED.
We are waiting for matte, non-flickering microLED.
Otherwise, the laptop is a clear flaw in many aspects. But as usual, on a planet with already 8 billion people, there will always be eccentrics with money who will be interested in buying another toy...