This certification means the displays can properly sync with Nvidia GeForce graphics cards, helping minimize common gaming issues such as screen tearing and frame stutter.
Samsung also highlighted that its upcoming OLED TVs support HDR10+ Advanced, a technology designed to deliver improved peak brightness, deeper contrast, and more accurate color reproduction.
With this certification, Samsung’s newest displays meet Nvidia’s requirements for high-end gaming performance and smooth visual output.
Samsung’s HDR10+ Advanced vs Dolby’s next-gen HDR
HDR10+ Advanced represents Samsung’s latest push against Dolby’s premium HDR ecosystem. Unlike Dolby Vision 2, Samsung’s format is royalty-free, continuing the company’s long-standing strategy of avoiding Dolby licensing.
The new standard is aimed at high-brightness televisions capable of reaching 4,000 - 5,000 nits. It relies on enhanced metadata combined with AI-based processing, allowing displays to optimize image quality dynamically on a scene-by-scene or frame-by-frame basis.
HDR10+ Advanced also introduces cloud-gaming enhancements, including an adaptive mode that detects ambient lighting and adjusts tone mapping in real time to maintain visual clarity during cloud-based gameplay.
Gaming TVs are rising, but format choices may complicate buying decisions
Samsung prominently promoted G-SYNC compatibility across its 2026 OLED TV lineup, while confirming the same support for the Odyssey G60H and G61SH monitors. Nvidia’s G-SYNC technology matches a display’s refresh rate to the GPU’s output, reducing visual disruptions during gameplay.
Modern premium TVs now offer gaming-grade features once limited to monitors, such as 144Hz refresh rates and extremely low input lag. For example, LG’s C5 OLED reaches 144Hz and delivers input latency of roughly 4.3ms.
However, competing HDR formats like HDR10+ Advanced and Dolby Vision 2 could divide the market. Buyers may increasingly choose displays based on HDR compatibility, which also affects console experiences - Xbox Series X/S supports Dolby Vision gaming, while PlayStation 5 relies on HDR10.
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