WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 2026|No. 7271
Tech · Android · HDR

Android 17 Adds Eclipsa Video HDR for Consistent Playback

Google's Android 17 introduces Eclipsa Video, a new HDR standard that automatically adjusts brightness and colors for consistent playback across devices.

An Android phone displaying an HDR video with improved brightness and color accuracy thanks to Eclipsa Video.
An Android phone displaying an HDR video with improved brightness and color accuracy thanks to Eclipsa Video.
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Google introduces Eclipsa Video in Android 17, a new HDR video standard designed to deliver more consistent brightness and colors across different devices.

The feature somehow adjusts HDR content based on how bright the display is, so videos can look more natural on smartphones, tablets, and TVs, without all that hassle. It also helps the on-screen text plus interface items stay easier to read while HDR videos are playing, instead of getting washed out.

And unlike Android 16, where people had to tweak HDR brightness themselves, Eclipsa Video runs these improvements automatically. It even does frame by frame changes to keep colors looking right, maintain contrast, and keep the whole picture quality closer to accurate.

Eclipsa Video is based on the SMPTE ST 2094-50 standard, developed by Google with Apple and NBCUniversal. Samsung has also indicated that support may arrive on Galaxy devices through the upcoming One UI 9 update.

PAN's pipeline reviewed approximately 1 open sources for this article. No human editor reviewed this article before publication.

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