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Those technologies include automatic low-latency mode and variable refresh rate, and issues can include dropping back to 60Hz instead of 120Hz.
TURN ON HDR XBOX ONE TV
Well, Microsoft warns in the setup screen that "some TVs may experience high latency issues," and the company warned "Players with TV models that have not been optimized to unlock Dolby Vision with next-gen gaming settings may experience latency issues during gameplay," in the announcement. You may wonder why you shouldn't just flip the switch and leave it on, anyway. Technically, that's considered Dolby Vision support, but it usually won't show you any significant differences over the standard HDR you've been using. The Xbox's Dolby Vision implementation can take that HDR10 metadata and do the same thing, but a bit better. The key here is "natively." There are a ton of games that use basic HDR10 metadata and rely on the operating system to map the tonal range and color rendering. Until there's an official list, our sister site GameSpot pulled together this list of games that natively supported Dolby Vision during preview: (It looks like there might have been one, but if so it's since been taken down.) In other words, we need a list of games that were designed to take advantage of Dolby's technology, which can take granular scene-by-scene instructions and display them optimally. Microsoft made the Dolby Vision support official at the end of September, but the company hasn't provided a list of games that support it natively.