Tito’s video showed the exact same brightness issues and he also opened the device to take a look inside. You should really think about this before you buy anything that company makes. They don’t apologize to customers who wasted their $200. They don’t address the serious video output issue, for a device that costs FOUR TIMES as much as better solutions. After seeing these reviews, I was far too nice.Īlso, Eon’s own response to MVG’s video says all you should need to know about the people who run that company: When the device was first announced, my gut told me this was going to be the case, however I tried my best to keep an open mind and find some use case for it. For about $200, you get video output that’s about on-par with the cheapest, worst HDMI plug & play’s, combined with a cheap network hub and HDMI splitter. Reviews are coming in on the Eon Gaming Xbox HDMI + Network adapter…and they’re not good. Here’s links to the device, the better option…and the original post is below: As a note, this still won’t fix the extra analog video interference and as both reviews below demonstrate, it’s still lower quality than MUCH cheaper solutions For this absolutely ripoff of a price, I still can’t recommend anyone buy it. Check the video above for the fix (assuming you can even do it on your display) and please check out the reviews below for more info. The HDMI output is telling your display or capture card that the Xbox is outputting a limited range color, when it’s actually outputting full-range color. UPDATE 10/11: Looks like the Stream Professor found the problem – Eon set the wrong output flag in their HDMI transmitter.
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