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Pixelated Blacks while watching video

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  • Video
  • Graphics
Last response: in Graphics & Displays
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April 30, 2014 4:02:32 PM

HI,
I am hoping to get some specific help. When I watch video playback (downloaded content) the dark blacks look very bad, almost like an original NINTENDO. It is almost blocky. The colors and brighter scenes look excellent. When I watch Netflix it is almost always like that.

I can play any game and never have that problem though.

I have done a speed test at speedtest.net and i get over 50mb dl and over 12mb ul.

I am running a 3570k cpu, 16 gb ram, GTX 780 MSI gpu, and on a SSD. I know my computer should have perfect picture so I am trying to figure out why I have this problem. It does not matter what monitor I use, it happens with both my 23 inch and my 40 inch.

Any help would be great. If you think it is a specific hardware problem please post how to test or determine it is.

Thanks in advance,
Camsix

More about : pixelated blacks watching video

April 30, 2014 4:14:33 PM

Heavy video compression can cause this issue(compression artifacts). Even some parts on dvd's can have some of it.

It can be more pronounced if you have your brightness set a bit too high.
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April 30, 2014 5:06:25 PM

nukemaster said:
Heavy video compression can cause this issue(compression artifacts). Even some parts on dvd's can have some of it.

It can be more pronounced if you have your brightness set a bit too high.


What about the Netflix portion of it? It is contant bad resolution. One thing I failed to mention. On my wife's computer we do not have any of these problems.
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April 30, 2014 7:29:07 PM

I would get a video off the internet that does this and try it on both systems.

Something else to look at is the dynamic range(this is not dynamic contrast) set on your system. For some reason many cards come default to limited range(16-235 vs 0-255 for full). That setting will make the darkest colors brighter and generally washed out looking and cut off the top end a bit as well. This may in some situations show more of these artifacts.

Can you by any chance get a screen capture of this issue to show us.

This is an image showing limited vs full range, but it is much more noticeable on some types of video(this just happened to be the first video I grabbed from Saints Row 3)
http://i58.tinypic.com/286v5ar.jpg
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May 1, 2014 10:27:31 AM

nukemaster said:
I would get a video off the internet that does this and try it on both systems.

Something else to look at is the dynamic range(this is not dynamic contrast) set on your system. For some reason many cards come default to limited range(16-235 vs 0-255 for full). That setting will make the darkest colors brighter and generally washed out looking and cut off the top end a bit as well. This may in some situations show more of these artifacts.

Can you by any chance get a screen capture of this issue to show us.

This is an image showing limited vs full range, but it is much more noticeable on some types of video(this just happened to be the first video I grabbed from Saints Row 3)
http://i58.tinypic.com/286v5ar.jpg


Here is a screenshot of a movie. Take a look at the blacks. Its weird, it only happens in videos...not games.
http://i1172.photobucket.com/albums/r580/Kaleb_Wicklund...
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Best solution

May 2, 2014 11:24:13 AM

Your image got shrunk so it is hard to see, I recommend cropping to just one desktop.

You can hold ALT when you hit print screen and get just the currently selected window. For the hell of it, have your tried other browsers or does it happen in every video player(my screen's are from a video of a game :)  ).

Here is some compression artifacts(due to low bit rates)
Something you should not generally have with your connection and netflix generally being good. This is more of an example of what this kind of thing looks like. With different color settings, it is much less noticeable.

Check the back wall
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