this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2025
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High resolution ≠ clarity.

Plenty of so-called “4K” streams look worse than a 1080p Blu-ray—smeared shadows, mosquito noise, blocky skies. Resolution is just pixel math. Clarity is bitrate. And that’s where streaming falls flat.

Netflix 4K HDR? Around 15–17 Mbps. YouTube 4K? Maybe 12–20 Mbps if you’re lucky. Compare that to a 4K UHD Blu-ray spinning at 80–100 Mbps—with peaks past 120. That’s not a rounding error. That’s five to ten times more data flowing into your eyeballs.

Streaming services throttle because they have to. Bandwidth is limited, people watch on phones, and adaptive compression keeps everyone from buffering. It’s accessible, yes—but it’s not the “true” 4K people imagine.

Which is why even a decade-old 1080p Blu-ray often looks sharper, cleaner, more alive than the 4K stream that’s supposed to replace it. More data means more picture, every single time.

4K streaming is marketing. Blu-ray is the truth.

@movies@piefed.social

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[–] phaysis@mastodon.coffee 13 points 4 days ago (1 children)

@atomicpoet @movies
Whenever I want to record something, like the Olympic opening ceremonies, I prefer to capture the terrestrial ATSC digital broadcast rather than capture it from the cable operator, because my cable operator always crunches the bitrate and it looks way worse.

[–] UltraMagnus0001@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

In NYC my parents cable looks horrible. I can see the blocks and color banding and they have a decent TV with Sony's amazing processing.