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After the maximum brightness was 3600 hours, the OLED version of switch finally burned the screen

I believe many players remember that the well-known Nintendo Tubing Master WULFF DEN once did a "burn-screen" experiment - let the OLED version of the Switch continuously illuminate the screen for 1800 hours at the highest brightness. Although the Switch survived the test at the time, what about 3600 hours of continuous bright screen?

After the maximum brightness was 3600 hours, the OLED version of switch finally burned the screen

Today, WULFF DEN updated the latest progress of the experiment: after 3600 hours of maximum brightness, continuous bright screen, and display of the breath of Zelda's Breath of the Wild temple, his OLED version of the Switch screen finally appeared on the screen of the invisible blue shadow.

WULFF DEN said that after a long period of lighting, the red and green pixels on the OLED screen showing the highlights of the temple become fainter, which is also the reason for the blue shadow. He also said that since it is impossible for normal players to make the Switch display the same screen continuously at the highest brightness for 3600 hours (150 days), players do not have to worry about the occurrence of the "burn-up screen" phenomenon within the life of the Switch.

He also did not forget to ridicule that the OLED "burn-out" phenomenon that we often say is not so much a "burn-in" screen as a "burn-out" caused by olED pixels displaying fixed pictures for a long time and a rapid aging life.

After the maximum brightness was 3600 hours, the OLED version of switch finally burned the screen

Many Switch players expressed their gratitude to WULLF DEN for this "ultimate experiment", which is far more convincing than the guarantee that "modern OLED screens will not burn screens".

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