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Is there a burn-in screen problem? The Switch OLED 1800 hour test reveals the answer

As the world's hot game handheld, the Switch trend has swept the world, and the Switch OLED listed some time ago has become a hot game handheld new product. However, considering the characteristics of the OLED panel, YouTube blogger Wulff Den used his own Switch OLED to conduct 1800 hours of testing to see if there would be a burn-up screen.

Is there a burn-in screen problem? The Switch OLED 1800 hour test reveals the answer

OLED panel burn-in phenomenon refers to olED different color pixel life with time brightness attenuation, when a certain area of the screen for a long time (hundreds of hours) to display a fixed screen, the pixel brightness attenuation speed of this area will be faster than other places, resulting in unrecoverable dark spots on the screen, and this screen burning situation is irreversible, will seriously affect the visual experience.

Is there a burn-in screen problem? The Switch OLED 1800 hour test reveals the answer

Wulff Den displays a static screenshot from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild in maximum brightness and uses the Hori SplitPad's auto-shoot feature to keep the screen from automatically turning off. After 1800 hours of testing, shishshs tested the screen data of Switch OLED, and the results showed that after 1800 hours of static screen playback, there was no obvious screen burning phenomenon, but there was some slight color confusion, such as some greenish in blue and white. It also means that these problems are not seen in daily use unless carefully observed. So at present, the screen of Switch OLED is still relatively durable, at least before eating ash, there is a high probability that there will be no burning screen.

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