| Capitalizt |
First of all, make sure the "RGB super white" is enabled in your PS3 menu. It improves the picture greatly and should be enabled by default..but it can't hurt to check.
As for TV settings, every set is different, but in general my generic settings to make games look good are.. (from middle/0)
color: + 4 or 5
brightness: -5 or -6
tint: 0
contrast +10-15
sharpness: all the way down (I don't think sharpness actually improves the picture on modern HD sets.. It only adds noise and jaggies to the pixels..but every set is different and if it looks good to you, go for it.)
The one thing you can calibrate with certainty is the brightness. I had my set professionally calibrated a while back and the guy told me how.. Dim the lights in the room and get down on your knees by the TV while nothing is on..or during a pitch black scene such as the border of a DVD or game menu. Move your face within three inches of the screen and look closely at the black area. If the brightness is too high, you will see lots of small white "noise" dots constantly popping in and out of the image. Slowly turn the brightness down click by click until the noise disappears. There will be one particular setting when the noise disappears entirely. That is the proper brightness setting for whatever you are watching at the moment. You will see it the way the developers intended it to be seen at that point. Sometimes games are made with different levels of default brightness and the setting can be different from watching Blu Rays, etc..so you may need to adjust it depending on what you are using at the moment.
Try the generic color/contrast settings I mentioned above, and do the brightness trick I just mentioned. It should make your picture look pretty good. ;) |
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