Built for real setups
External monitors, laptop panels, docks, KVMs, USB-C hubs, TVs, and HDR modes can all behave differently.
Display Dimmer gives you a clean way to dim external monitors and laptop screens, even when Windows does not show a brightness slider for every display.
External monitors, laptop panels, docks, KVMs, USB-C hubs, TVs, and HDR modes can all behave differently.
Use DDC/CI hardware brightness when your monitor and connection support it reliably.
Use gamma dimming when hardware brightness is missing, blocked, or still too bright for your room.
A Windows screen dimmer should work across real monitor setups, not just one perfect display. Real setups include external displays, laptop panels, docks, KVMs, USB-C hubs, TVs, HDR modes, and monitors that only partly support hardware control.
Display Dimmer is designed for that mixed reality. It uses hardware brightness where it makes sense, then gives you a software dimming fallback when hardware control is missing or unreliable.
Changes the monitor's own brightness setting when your display and connection support it.
Darkens the image Windows sends to the screen when hardware brightness is unavailable.
You can mix these methods per display, so one monitor can use true hardware brightness while another uses gamma dimming.
Display Dimmer can dim most external monitors and built-in laptop screens that Windows recognizes. External monitors may use DDC/CI hardware brightness when available, while gamma dimming provides a software fallback.
No. Gamma dimming darkens the image sent to the screen. It is useful when hardware brightness is unavailable, but DDC/CI hardware control is preferred when it is supported and reliable.
Often, yes. Gamma dimming can make the displayed image appear darker than the monitor's lowest hardware brightness setting, which is useful at night or in dark rooms.
Use hardware brightness where supported, with gamma fallback when needed.