display comfort

About this tag
The display comfort tag on WindowsForum.com covers Windows 11 features and settings designed to reduce eye strain and improve visual accessibility. Recent discussions focus on a hidden Screen Tint feature in preview builds, which offers customizable color overlays beyond the standard Night Light. Topics include amber, rose, blue, green, and custom tint options with intensity controls, aimed at users sensitive to glare or harsh contrast. The tag also relates to existing accessibility tools like color filters and contrast themes. Content emphasizes early engineering work and potential system-level solutions for eye comfort.
  1. Windows 11 Release Preview 26100.8728 Fixes: quieter Widgets, update pauses & more

    Microsoft’s June 12, 2026 Windows 11 Release Preview build 26100.8728/26200.8728 puts five unusually practical features on deck for mainstream PCs: quieter Widgets, calendar-based update pauses, point-in-time restore, Screen Tint, and a broad Bluetooth reliability sweep. The important part is...
  2. Windows 11 Screen Tint: hidden accessibility display overlay with custom comfort colors

    Windows 11 appears to be gaining a new accessibility-focused display option called Screen Tint, a hidden Settings page that applies a soft color overlay across the desktop. The feature, seen in preview build 26300.8289 and tested by Windows Latest, expands beyond the familiar warm glow of Night...
  3. Windows 11 “Screen Tint” Could Add Custom Eye Comfort Tints

    Microsoft is reportedly preparing a new Windows 11 display accessibility feature called Screen Tint, and if it ships the way preview-build sleuths describe it, it could become one of the most practical eye-comfort additions Windows has seen in years. Unlike the current Night Light setting, which...