Which phone do you use? 🤷🏻♂️ iPhone 16: • Display: 6.1-inch Super Retina XDR OLED. • Peak Brightness: Up to 2,000 nits for HDR content.  • HDR Support: Supports HDR10 and Dolby Vision, delivering vibrant colors and deep contrasts. Samsung Galaxy S24: • Display: 6.2-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X. • Peak Brightness: Up to 2,600 nits for HDR content.  • HDR Support: Supports HDR10+ but does not support Dolby Vision. Google Pixel 9: • Display: 6.3-inch OLED. • Peak Brightness: Up to 2,700 nits for HDR content. • HDR Support: Supports HDR10 and HDR10+, but lacks Dolby Vision support.
None of the above - I’m watching on an iPad Pro M4, 13-inch model, with “Ultra Retina XDR” (Tandem OLED) display. Up to 1,600 nits peak HDR brightness, supports HLG, HDR10 and Dolby Vision.
This is magical. Produced at the highest professional level. Wonderful shots combined with music make the mood rise and imprint positive emotions for a long time. Continue to amaze.👋👋
I have to say, I’ve followed your channel for a very long time. At this point your new videos are a moment in our household - we all get together the night it’s posted to watch. In full surround on a large TV with Hue Sync, it’s like a modern remake of Fantasia in 2024. Thank you!
Thank you so much for your kind words and for sharing this with me! It’s incredibly humbling to hear that my videos bring your family together and create such a special experience. Knowing they resonate in such a meaningful way inspires me to keep creating. Your support truly means the world to me!
Noticed some issues on a few of my displays where things look clipped off. Decided to investigate. It appears the Mastering Display max nits is "1,000" nit, while the MaxCLL is interestingly set to "558" nits. Was there perhaps a typo while encoding or remuxing this or did RUclips break something? The video content pushes much brighter than that, with many shots hitting ~2,000 nits, and a few (such as the stopwatch in the beginning) hitting ~3,500 nits. It certainly looks great on my Flanders display using the version I downloaded, but not so much on my poor LG OLED with the RUclips app, which seems to be hard clamping anything over 1,000 nits. The snow at 3:38 for instance looks solid white on that display, which isn't how I'd normally expect it to behave (normally it tonemaps to fit everything in when it gets the HDR10 metadata). Hope this is helpful. Love your work Eugene.
Amazing once again as already said could you stretch out some of the scenes, the consumer i think will enjoy it better. I do not want to criticise, i would like to offer a suggestion thats all, your work is phenomenal.
Hi. You are an HDR specialist. I would like to know how to set the brightness in HDR games, a paper white value (200nits, 120nits, 100nits?), for a completely dark room.??
@@EugeneBelsky On iphone 11 pro Oled whites are warmer and tend to burn out quicker. Greens, especialy at 1:23 and 2:23 are way too bright. For my taste. The reds at the clock szene are a bit on the bright site as well maybe. Anyway its cherrypicking and I really enjoyed your content as allways!
Can you post NON HDR (SDR) version of this video? ... Because in a non HDR display or projector, it looks all over exposed, thanks. And yes, not everybody likes how HDR looks. And the RUclips auto HDR to SDR it's very bad, most of the times, that's why it looks overexposed in SDR
BTW! There are other channels with HDR content, and those videos here in RUclips in SDR looks NOT overexposed, so may be the overexposed scenes are on purpose? even when are watched HDR displays? I don't know.
@@ryofang Ok I've watched on my LG OLED HDR calibrated, and yes, there is less blown highlights, but at least 5 to 10% of the area of some highlights are overexposed, just some examples ... the TAIL of the horse running (0:48), The top of the green pines at (1:24), and almost all the white snow in the mountains, totally flat white, no texture, no nothing.
Which phone do you use? 🤷🏻♂️
iPhone 16:
• Display: 6.1-inch Super Retina XDR OLED.
• Peak Brightness: Up to 2,000 nits for HDR content. 
• HDR Support: Supports HDR10 and Dolby Vision, delivering vibrant colors and deep contrasts.
Samsung Galaxy S24:
• Display: 6.2-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X.
• Peak Brightness: Up to 2,600 nits for HDR content. 
• HDR Support: Supports HDR10+ but does not support Dolby Vision.
Google Pixel 9:
• Display: 6.3-inch OLED.
• Peak Brightness: Up to 2,700 nits for HDR content.
• HDR Support: Supports HDR10 and HDR10+, but lacks Dolby Vision support.
None of the above - I’m watching on an iPad Pro M4, 13-inch model, with “Ultra Retina XDR” (Tandem OLED) display. Up to 1,600 nits peak HDR brightness, supports HLG, HDR10 and Dolby Vision.
Samsung S22 Ultra. And by the looks of what's coming, it will be not worth upgrading to even S25 Ultra.
Beautiful video , awesome as always , thank you so much for sharing this magical beauty 🙏
Thanks you! 🙏
One of my favorite channels delivers again, thank you for the work that you do 🙏🏼
Thank you 🙏 I appreciate it!!!
Stunningly beautiful. Thank you.
Many thanks!
So beautiful to watch. ❤
Thank you very much!
This is magical. Produced at the highest professional level. Wonderful shots combined with music make the mood rise and imprint positive emotions for a long time. Continue to amaze.👋👋
Thank you 🙏 I appreciate it!!!
Thank you for all of your amazing content! LG C4 77 is my favourite way to watch 🙏
Thanks! That’s one of the best tv on the market, planning to get too
@@EugeneBelsky Good Intuition!
Beautiful video..watching on 16 pro max❤
I have to say, I’ve followed your channel for a very long time. At this point your new videos are a moment in our household - we all get together the night it’s posted to watch. In full surround on a large TV with Hue Sync, it’s like a modern remake of Fantasia in 2024. Thank you!
Thank you so much for your kind words and for sharing this with me! It’s incredibly humbling to hear that my videos bring your family together and create such a special experience. Knowing they resonate in such a meaningful way inspires me to keep creating. Your support truly means the world to me!
Как всегда круто! Звук просто невероятный! Реально,на основе этого ролика,можно сравнивать ТВ. Респект Вам!
Благодарю 🙏
🤗 THANKS EUGENE,FOR YOUR EXCELLENT WORK OF ART 🖼️ AND YOUR SUBJECT IS AS ALWAYS WORTH SHARING 💚💚💚
Thank you my friend!
Just marvelous😍🙌❤
Thank you 🙏
Excellent Eugene...and thank you for the fullscreen 👍👍
Glad you enjoyed it
@@EugeneBelsky 👍
Para todos que fazem parte dessa equipe extraordinária meu muito obrigado por nos proporcionar essas imagens lindas e MAGNÍFICAS.
Hammer 🎉👍
Thank you 🙏
Amazing to watch
Thanks 🙏
Сумасшедшая красота! Браво Евгений! ❤
Благодарю 🙏
Too much of this is quick cuts. Need to be able to enjoy the scenery and details. As is, each scene flips past too fast.
Appreciate your feedback!
glow and flow
Mesmerizing landscape.
I get heavy clipping especially on cloud scenes. Is this graded well above 1000nits? 2000ISH?
Nice👍👍👍
Super! 👌🏼😉
Thanks!
NICE VIDEO
Thank you!
Noticed some issues on a few of my displays where things look clipped off. Decided to investigate. It appears the Mastering Display max nits is "1,000" nit, while the MaxCLL is interestingly set to "558" nits. Was there perhaps a typo while encoding or remuxing this or did RUclips break something? The video content pushes much brighter than that, with many shots hitting ~2,000 nits, and a few (such as the stopwatch in the beginning) hitting ~3,500 nits. It certainly looks great on my Flanders display using the version I downloaded, but not so much on my poor LG OLED with the RUclips app, which seems to be hard clamping anything over 1,000 nits. The snow at 3:38 for instance looks solid white on that display, which isn't how I'd normally expect it to behave (normally it tonemaps to fit everything in when it gets the HDR10 metadata). Hope this is helpful. Love your work Eugene.
Wow
Tanks 🤙
Amazing once again as already said could you stretch out some of the scenes, the consumer i think will enjoy it better.
I do not want to criticise, i would like to offer a suggestion thats all, your work is phenomenal.
Thank you! 🙏 Appreciate it!
Hi. You are an HDR specialist. I would like to know how to set the brightness in HDR games, a paper white value (200nits, 120nits, 100nits?), for a completely dark room.??
Nice content. The greens and reds are much too vivid on my screen (apple xdr)
Could you do me a favor and compare it with your iPhone?
@@EugeneBelsky On iphone 11 pro Oled whites are warmer and tend to burn out quicker. Greens, especialy at 1:23 and 2:23 are way too bright. For my taste. The reds at the clock szene are a bit on the bright site as well maybe. Anyway its cherrypicking and I really enjoyed your content as allways!
Thanks 🙏
Nice, but where is the 8k?
Can you post NON HDR (SDR) version of this video? ... Because in a non HDR display or projector, it looks all over exposed, thanks. And yes, not everybody likes how HDR looks. And the RUclips auto HDR to SDR it's very bad, most of the times, that's why it looks overexposed in SDR
U can adjust windows to un-process HDR.
@@ryofang It will never be a good version like the original rendered as SDR
BTW! There are other channels with HDR content, and those videos here in RUclips in SDR looks NOT overexposed, so may be the overexposed scenes are on purpose? even when are watched HDR displays? I don't know.
@@SuperDigitalAI I watched this vid on my Android phone that supports Dolby vision/HDR and my windows laptop with non-hdr screen, both are fine.
@@ryofang Ok I've watched on my LG OLED HDR calibrated, and yes, there is less blown highlights, but at least 5 to 10% of the area of some highlights are overexposed, just some examples ... the TAIL of the horse running (0:48), The top of the green pines at (1:24), and almost all the white snow in the mountains, totally flat white, no texture, no nothing.