Samsung is launching its first HDR10+ gaming displays

The image is called "HDR10GAMING Standardmain" and it can be found at cdn.vox-cdn.com.

Redout 2 is playing on a display.

The image is of a phone.

The first displays that will support the gaming standard will be from the company. The new lineup of QLED TVs and gaming monitors will be the first to support the standard.

At the upcoming Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Redout 2 and Pinball FX will be supported by the new HDR10+ feature, which will be showcased if the game developer doesn't drop out. Happy Trails and the Kidnapped Princess will be on the floor at Game Mechanic Studios.

Major games available on the competing standard include Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War, but the games that are being promoted are not. At least ten games are supported on the Xbox Series X and S.

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A curved gaming monitor with a new gaming compatible software.

The image is of a phone.

There is more visual information in the regular version of the game than there is in the new version, and it supports variable refresh rate and auto low latency mode. The standard will work over 120Hz, but it doesn't go into detail.

The competing standard, Dolby Vision gaming, is already doing all of this. In June of this year, the C1 and G1 displays were announced by the rivals.

If the whole setup is vertically integrated to support the format, the whole experience of HDR10+ will be easy to use. In order to play a game with the extra visual metadata, you will need a graphics card with support for the GeForce RTX 30 Series, the RTX 20 Series, and the GTX 16 Series.