New Dynamic HDR Format Promises Brighter, Smarter, and More Adaptive Visuals
Samsung has previewed its upcoming HDR10 Plus Advanced format, a next-generation dynamic HDR standard designed to rival the recently announced Dolby Vision 2. During a press event last week, the company showcased a simulated demo highlighting six key enhancements that promise to elevate picture quality across high-end TVs and gaming displays.
The new format aims to take full advantage of modern displays capable of 4,000 to 5,000 nits of brightness—well beyond what most current content supports. Samsung says HDR10 Plus Advanced will deliver a more refined and adaptive viewing experience by dynamically optimizing brightness, color, and contrast based on scene content, room lighting, and even genre.
Six Major Upgrades for a Smarter HDR Experience
According to Samsung, HDR10 Plus Advanced introduces several major upgrades to image processing and display management:
- Enhanced brightness mapping for ultra-bright TVs up to 5,000 nits
- Genre-based optimization to tailor image tone and contrast for movies, sports, and games
- Dynamic motion control that adjusts smoothing intensity to reduce blur without losing cinematic texture
- Game-specific visual tuning to boost contrast, reduce latency, and adapt visuals for streamed or cloud-based gaming
- Ambient light adaptation that modifies tone and color based on room brightness
- Advanced tone mapping and color precision for more accurate detail in shadows and highlights
These improvements are designed to give content creators and TV manufacturers finer control over HDR output while providing viewers with a more natural and consistent experience across different lighting conditions.
Streaming Support Still the Missing Piece
Despite its technical promise, HDR10 Plus Advanced will rely on streaming platform adoption before consumers can enjoy its full benefits. Amazon Prime Video has already committed to supporting the format, continuing its partnership with Samsung on HDR initiatives. However, other major platforms may take longer to follow.
It wasn’t until 2025 that both Netflix and Disney+ added support for the original HDR10 Plus, which launched back in 2018. That slow rollout underscores one of HDR10 Plus’s biggest challenges—convincing streaming giants to invest in new metadata formats when Dolby Vision remains the dominant premium HDR standard.
Competition Heats Up in the HDR Race
The arrival of HDR10 Plus Advanced marks Samsung’s latest effort to challenge Dolby’s leadership in high dynamic range technology. With Dolby Vision 2 introducing similar adaptive and high-brightness features, the HDR landscape is poised for intensified competition.
For consumers, that rivalry could be a win: more visually striking content, better display optimization, and a faster push toward the next generation of 4K and 8K viewing experiences.
