I'd say my room is medium brightness at best. It could just be preference due to years of having LCDs and LEDs set that way.
On that note, I think I'll reschedule the tech visit to Saturday (so I don't have to waste a half day at work). I used the following video's calibration suggestions:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4cpwUj-UP8
And I believe I'm seeing less inconsistency with the picture's brightness. I may have jumped the gun on this one due to my inexperience with OLEDs, so I'll take some extra time to play around with it instead of waving my hands in fear that something is wrong.
In any event, I have some non-doomsday questions as I want to continue to achieve the "ideal" picture.
1. In that video, the calibrator sets True Motion to "user" (which has de-judder at 10 at default). Is there a benefit to this? I thought most people preferred True Motion turned off completely.
2. Do I follow these same color/brightness settings under the HDR picture setting? Or is that a different calibration video I should seek out?
3. If I want to increase the vibrancy of a picture without necessarily increasing its contrast/brightness (in fear it may cause another inconsistency), what would be the best way to go about it? Basically, I like my anime and animation-related stuff to be colorful and vibrant. What's the best way to achieve that?
4. It seems I'm going to need a new receiver that will let me connect to the 4K TV so it can output audio from other connected devices (PS4 Pro, etc). Will
this one do the trick? If I connect the PS4 Pro to the receiver, will I get the full benefit of having it directly connected to the TV? Also, am I going to need a compliant HDMI cable for the receiver itself? Also, do receivers tend to go on sale on Black Friday?
5. What's the difference between ISF Bright Room and Dark Room? Which should I be using as far as a room that has the same kind of light throughout the day/night?
6. What should I set HDR effect to? Does that only affect content in HDR or non-HDR stuff too?