Uneven or cloudy black levels usually result from LCD backlight behavior, panel pressure, viewing angle, room light, or calibration settings. Setup changes can reduce some symptoms, but true panel-uniformity problems are often hardware traits.
Does a black loading screen show gray clouds in the corners even though the game or movie is supposed to be pitch dark? A few controlled checks can separate a normal LCD limitation from a defect that affects everyday use. Here is how to identify the cause, improve what can be adjusted, and decide whether the screen still suits your gaming, office, or portable setup.
What Cloudy Blacks Mean
Black-level clouding is the uneven appearance of dark areas across a screen. It may appear as bright corners, gray patches, edge glow, vertical bands, or a washed-out black field. On LCD monitors, it is usually tied to the backlight because the panel blocks light rather than turning individual pixels fully off.
An IPS LCD uses a constant LED backlight behind liquid crystals, so it cannot create true per-pixel black the way OLED can. IPS cannot produce true black because some light still leaks through the panel stack. That does not make IPS unsuitable; it remains a strong choice for productivity, color consistency, bright rooms, and long sessions with static content. Limited black depth is simply one of its tradeoffs.
For example, a 27-inch IPS gaming monitor may look clean in spreadsheets at 35% brightness, then show pale corners during a dark game at night. The monitor may not have changed; the content and room conditions have made a hidden weakness visible.
The Main Causes of Uneven Black Levels
Backlight Bleed and Edge Leakage
Backlight bleed occurs when light escapes unevenly around the panel edges or corners. It is most obvious on black screens in a dim room, especially when brightness is high. Edge-lit monitors and portable displays are more prone to visible variation because light must spread inward from the edges.

Portable displays make this compromise especially clear. Thin edge-lit designs save weight and desk space, but edge-lit backlights can create brighter or dimmer zones because illumination must travel across the panel. Direct-lit designs can appear more even, but they are usually thicker and less convenient for travel.
To test this, set the monitor to your normal working brightness, then view a full-screen black image from your usual seating position. If the corners flare only at 100% brightness in a dark room, the issue may be tolerable. If bright patches distract you during games, movies, or dark-mode work at normal brightness, they affect practical use.
IPS Glow and Viewing Angle
IPS glow is often mistaken for backlight bleed, but it behaves differently. It appears as a silvery or gray glow, usually near the corners, and changes as your viewing position changes. If you lean left, right, up, or down and the bright area shifts or fades, viewing geometry is contributing to the problem.

On a 32-inch monitor viewed from 2 ft away, your eyes meet the corners at a steeper angle than the center. Moving the screen a few inches farther back, positioning it at eye level, or reducing brightness can make the glow less obvious without changing the panel.
This is also why ultrawide monitors require careful positioning. A wider screen can improve productivity by keeping more windows visible, but its far edges sit at stronger viewing angles. A mild curve can reduce that effect, although it cannot correct true backlight bleed.
Panel Pressure, Manufacturing Tolerance, and Shipping Stress
LCD panels are layered physical systems. Pressure from assembly, frame tension, internal components, shipping, or an overly tight monitor-arm mount can create localized brightness changes. In these cases, the cloudy pattern may not be related to settings.
Uniformity varies from unit to unit. Monitor uniformity describes how evenly a screen displays brightness and color from center to edge, and flaws tend to stand out on full-screen gray, white, black, dark, or low-contrast content. One sample of a monitor model may therefore look acceptable while another appears distracting.
If clouding forms a hard-edged stain, line, or growing patch, treat it more seriously. A stable, mild corner glow is common on LCDs; a spreading shape may indicate panel stress, damage, or an internal defect.
Ambient Light and Reflections
Room light can raise the visible black floor, making blacks look gray and uneven. Even a capable panel will appear worse if a lamp, window, or bright wall reflects off the screen.
Display research has found that increasing room illumination can raise measured black luminance while leaving bright whites largely unchanged, reducing perceived contrast. In everyday use, this means a dark scene can lose depth because the room is washing out shadow areas.
For gaming immersion, avoid placing a bright lamp behind your seating position. For office productivity, soft bias lighting behind the monitor can be better than using a bright screen in a completely dark room because it reduces eye strain while limiting reflections.

Calibration and Black Crush
Sometimes the screen is not truly cloudy; its black point is simply configured poorly. If shadow steps are clipped, crushed, or tinted, dark scenes can look muddy and unstable.
A black-point calibration test can reveal this problem. A well-tuned display may distinguish very low RGB shadow steps, while an average monitor may require several steps before detail becomes visible. If shadow detail appears only much later, excessive room light, unsuitable black-point calibration, or weak shadow performance may be involved. On an LCD, the backlight control raises both white and black luminance, so lowering brightness can reduce visible glow while also reducing peak output.
For many office environments, maximum brightness is unnecessary. A moderate setting often improves comfort during document work and makes uneven blacks less noticeable after hours.
How Panel Type Changes the Result
Different display technologies handle black levels differently. The best choice depends on whether you prioritize dark-scene immersion, competitive clarity, office reliability, or travel convenience.
Display Type |
Black-Level Strength |
Common Tradeoff |
Best Fit |
IPS LCD |
Good color and viewing consistency, but limited native black depth |
IPS glow, backlight bleed, weaker dark-room contrast |
Office work, creative workflows, mixed gaming |
VA LCD |
Usually deeper LCD blacks than IPS |
More motion smearing on some models, less consistent off-angle viewing |
Movies, dark games, general entertainment |
OLED |
Pixel-level black with no backlight bleed |
Burn-in risk with persistent static elements and brightness limiting |
HDR gaming, movies, controlled-light setups |
Mini-LED LCD |
Better local contrast than basic edge-lit LCD |
Blooming around bright objects and dimming behavior that varies by implementation |
HDR gaming, bright rooms, premium productivity |
OLED generally delivers the cleanest black uniformity because each pixel can turn off independently. For all-day spreadsheets, dashboards, coding windows, and other static interfaces, IPS may still be a practical choice because it avoids burn-in concerns and is widely available at lower cost. OLED emphasizes immersion and contrast; IPS emphasizes predictable daily use and value.
How to Test Black Uniformity Accurately
Test the monitor after it has warmed up for at least 30 minutes. Begin from your normal seating position, then check from a few angles. Disable HDR, dynamic contrast, local enhancement modes, and aggressive gaming presets before judging the panel.
A black screen is useful, but it should not be the only test. Full-screen gray, white, and dark game scenes reveal different problems. IPS screens may show edge leakage and color uniformity issues on different test patterns, so a display that looks acceptable on black can still show distracting variation on gray or white.
Use real content as the final test. A black image at 100% brightness in a dark room is a stress test, not a complete measure of ownership. If the same patch appears in dark games, movie letterbox bars, coding editors, or presentation decks at normal brightness, it is a meaningful defect for your use.
What You Can Improve
Start with brightness. Lowering a monitor from 100% to a realistic indoor level often reduces visible bleed and glow while improving comfort.
Next, reset the monitor to a neutral picture mode. Vivid presets, extreme contrast settings, black equalizers, and poorly tuned HDR modes can exaggerate cloudy blacks. Standard, sRGB, or Natural modes provide better baselines. If you use a portable USB-C display, confirm that it receives adequate power because insufficient delivery can cause unstable brightness or reduced performance.
Improve the environment by moving bright lamps out of the reflection path, avoiding direct sunlight on the panel, and considering soft bias lighting behind the monitor. Leave adequate space behind the display for ventilation, especially during long HDR sessions or all-day work.
Calibration can improve gamma, white point, and shadow visibility, but it cannot fully correct physical backlight unevenness. Uniformity compensation, when available, can make the screen appear more even, though it may reduce contrast or restrict some controls. That tradeoff may suit photo work better than gaming.
When to Return, Exchange, or Reassign the Monitor
A monitor does not need perfect uniformity to be usable; the question is whether its weakness disrupts the work or entertainment you bought it for. Mild glow visible only on a black test pattern is common. Clouding that draws your attention during daily use is more significant.
A competitive gamer may accept mild clouding if motion clarity, refresh rate, and input response are excellent. A player focused on cinematic dark scenes may find the same flaw distracting in caves, night environments, or cutscenes. A designer or editor may struggle with uneven brightness when evaluating shadows and color. For a portable screen used while traveling or in meetings, mild edge variation may be acceptable if the display is light, bright enough, and reliable.
If you are within the return window and the issue appears in real content at normal brightness, exchange the monitor. If the variation is limited to one corner and invisible in your usual applications, keeping it and adjusting the setup may be reasonable. If you already own the screen and notice the flaw mainly during entertainment, consider using it as a secondary office display and choosing OLED, VA, or Mini-LED for your primary immersive screen.
FAQ
Is Cloudy Black the Same as Dead Pixels?
No. Cloudy black is usually an area-level uniformity issue, while dead pixels are tiny fixed dots. A dead pixel tends to remain dark on bright backgrounds. Clouding affects larger regions and is often related to the backlight, panel layers, or viewing angle.
Does HDR Make Black Clouding Worse?
It can. HDR often increases highlight brightness and contrast demands, making backlight flaws, blooming, or edge leakage easier to see. On a basic edge-lit LCD, dark HDR scenes may look less controlled than standard dynamic range content.
Can Pressing the Screen Fix Backlight Bleed?
Applying pressure to the screen is risky. Thin, high-resolution, touch-enabled, and portable panels can be damaged by force. If the issue is severe or newly developed, document it and use warranty or return support instead.
Final Word
Cloudy blacks become easier to evaluate once you separate panel technology, room light, viewing angle, and calibration. Adjust the environment first, test with real content at normal brightness, and judge the display by your primary use. A suitable screen should support the game, edit, or workday without repeatedly drawing attention to gray patches in the corners.





