![]() Now if only the PS5 and Xbox Series X could just hurry up and get here early, so we can all play around with all their next-gen loveliness for ourselves!. And as we’ve seen, LG (along with, I suspect, other brands taking a similar not-quite-full-48Gbps-approach to HDMI 2.1 this year) can reasonably argue that it can make a more visible difference with the extra power it’s making available to its video processing systems by limiting the HDMI 2.1 bandwidth. So what does this all mean in practical terms? Well, while we don’t yet know for certain the absolute maximum potential output capability of the next generation of consoles, a TV being able to support 10-bit 4K at 120Hz with 10-bit RGB 4:4:4 should be enough to get the job done.Įven if a game was potentially able to up its output to 12-bit, it’s highly debatable that you would see a visible difference given that all TVs are currently only 10-bit. It’s interesting to note from the statement, too, that LG is now only claiming that two of the HDMIs on its 2020 8K OLED and LCD TVs will be full bandwidth 48Gbps connections capable of 12-bit 8K/60Hz at 4:2:0 YCbCr. And that it thinks this is OK to do because there’s little evidence of sources arriving that will take advantage of the full 48Gbps HDMI 2.1 data rate capacity. In other words, according to LG’s statement, the brand believes it can deliver better performance through its ‘intelligent’ automatic audio and visual adjustment systems if it takes processing capacity away from the HDMI 2.1 inputs and makes it available to the TVs’ AI systems instead. The Xbox Series X is going to push even 2020 TVs to their absolute limits when it launches at the.
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