I’m so done with win11, and currently 12 of my 15 machines are linux anyway, but AFAIK HDR (on nvidia gpu) is still impossible? Are you guys all on AMD or just not using hdr for gaming/media? So instead of relying on outdated info, just asking the pros :)

  • Domi@lemmy.secnd.me
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    7 days ago

    If you’re on KDE, you can use the “sRGB color intensity” to quickly test if your content (e.g. via mpv or Proton) is really in HDR.

    If the content changes while going from minimum to maximum in “sRGB color intensity”, it’s SDR, if it does not change, it’s HDR.

    I also have an OLED monitor and HDR looks fantastic on KDE.

    • lapo@f.lapo.it
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      3 days ago

      @domi @artyom Interesting. I didn’t think KDE supported it well yet.

      I’ll give it another try, because my gaming rig is the last Windows I have (while still using 50% of the time FreeBSD via ssh and Linux via WSL 🤣) and I’m really fed up with it.

      • Domi@lemmy.secnd.me
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        2 days ago

        It’s fairly straightforward nowadays and will get even easier this year.

        In KDE, you can just enable HDR and hit apply. There’s also a calibration tool integrated that is a little bit barebones but it does the job.

        For gaming, you currently still need Proton-GE until Valve’s Proton ships with the necessary libraries. You can easily download them using ProtonUp-Qt.

        Once that is done:

        • Restart Steam
        • Right click the game -> Properties...
        • Set the launch options to PROTON_ENABLE_WAYLAND=1 PROTON_ENABLE_HDR=1 %command%
        • Under Compatibility set the checkmark “Force the use of a specific Steam Play compatibility tool” and select the Proton-GE version you just installed before.

        That’s it, you can now enable HDR ingame.