Modern OLEDs have other burn-in prevention features too, like subtle logo dimming and built-in screensavers. They also do what’s called “pixel refreshing” when the panel is turned off. Not quite sure how that works.
Really the only way to get burn-in on a modern OLED is to turn off all the protection features, crank the brightness to near-max (never needs to be done in indoor environments), and leave a static image displaying on the screen for several hours at a time. Dude literally has to be on XVideos all day long, every day, several days in a row, for this to happen.
Modern OLEDs have other burn-in prevention features too, like subtle logo dimming and built-in screensavers. They also do what’s called “pixel refreshing” when the panel is turned off. Not quite sure how that works.
Really the only way to get burn-in on a modern OLED is to turn off all the protection features, crank the brightness to near-max (never needs to be done in indoor environments), and leave a static image displaying on the screen for several hours at a time. Dude literally has to be on XVideos all day long, every day, several days in a row, for this to happen.
How about if you just have the sun blazing in on your screen all day?
Then you need to rearrange your room better