How To Properly Set Up HDR On Nintendo Switch 2 For Your Display

The Nintendo Switch 2 is the first piece of hardware that Nintendo has launched with support for HDR, and its implementation thus far has been a little mixed. Outside of the screen that isn't equipped to get the best out of high dynamic range content, the settings for the HDR output via the dock are confusing, making it challenging to get a good picture to your much more capable display.

The good news is that with some time since launch, a lot of these frustrations have been deciphered into raw numbers that let you calibrate the Switch 2 perfectly for your display. HDTVTest has published a guide for how to set up your Nintendo Switch 2 with a range of displays, from LG and Samsung's OLED TVs, a variety of OLED monitors, and even some brands that aren't yet supporting HGIG, which is a critical dynamic tone mapping setting that the Switch 2 seems designed with in mind.


The issue with the system-level settings menu is that it's not clear about what it's changing in the background. Outside of its sun test pattern not working correctly without HGIG enabled (which makes calibration on displays without it a bit of guesswork still), each click upwards or downwards changings a nit setting in the background. The total value that you land on is then used to determine how many nits each notch raises the console's white point in the screen that comes afterwards, making it impossible to set it between the desired 200-250 paper white value usually attributed to accurate HDR presentation.

It's needlessly confusing, which makes HDTVTest's straightforward breakdown essential if you've be dissatisfied with how Mario Kart World looks on your expensive display. And with HDR supported so widely now, you might not even realize how much better your Nintendo Switch 2 could look when set up correctly, especially if you're unhappy with how it's presented on the console's main display. With the guide above, you should be seeing colors pop a little more and brighter highlights stand out against those darker backgrounds, bringing supported games to life as its developers intended. Just make sure to disable HDR for games that don't support it.

The Nintendo Switch 2 has gotten off to a great start, with Mario Kart World being sold with nearly 80% of all consoles in the US. Things aren't as promising on the third-party front, however, with one developer claiming that sales are "below our lowest expectations".

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