Posted August 08, 2023
So, ever since I moved to Windows 10 years ago, there's been this thing called DTS Audio. Never seen it before. All I know as that it was enabled by default and was a source of many woes for me as it made the sound coming from my speakers sound horrible (extremely bassy).
Thought it was a defect with my speakers but then randomly stumbled upon this thing. Seems like it's in Windows by default and also enabled by default. And yes, it was enabled and the Bass Boost was also on. Turned the entire thing off and voila, sound was back to normal.
But, ever since then, I have wondered if it is actually supposed to improve sound quality, how it works etc. I can't believe how difficult it is to find some precise info about this thing or what the separate options do. It's always some generic thing about how it provides "superior" audio experience, spatial audio and comparison with other similar stuff. But never any clear description of use cases or actual benefits, nor mention of some recommended settings or anything. What does it even do exactly? How does it ensure that my set of speakers will sound better when I have some almost decade old 2.1 set? Should I use it for movies? Games? Absolutely no idea.
I've toyed with it on occasion but always land back on disabling the entire thing because it makes some sounds come out "weird" for the lack of better term.
Can anyone knowledgeable about the subject chime in with WTF this thing is? Should I use it if I have a 2.1 speaker setup? Is it good for headphones only? What do the options do? I know that Bass amplification and Volume Equalization make everything sound like literal shit (even more confusing why Bass Amp is on by default), but what does the Spatial Audio or 3D Effects do? They are mutually exclusive and I am torn because it sounds "maybe better in some cases" and "weird/bad" in other cases. Should I touch the Equalizer? Advanced settings? I have frankly no idea.
Included some screens but the texts are in Czech. The stupid thing is probably latching on to system locale (hate when programs/apps do that) but should serve as an example for people to be able to check it out themselves.
The main reason I'm posting it is because it re-enabled itself after I recently performed a Windows update. Why is it even something that's on in Windows by default? I always have it off, but just going to ask here in case I'm missing something.
Thought it was a defect with my speakers but then randomly stumbled upon this thing. Seems like it's in Windows by default and also enabled by default. And yes, it was enabled and the Bass Boost was also on. Turned the entire thing off and voila, sound was back to normal.
But, ever since then, I have wondered if it is actually supposed to improve sound quality, how it works etc. I can't believe how difficult it is to find some precise info about this thing or what the separate options do. It's always some generic thing about how it provides "superior" audio experience, spatial audio and comparison with other similar stuff. But never any clear description of use cases or actual benefits, nor mention of some recommended settings or anything. What does it even do exactly? How does it ensure that my set of speakers will sound better when I have some almost decade old 2.1 set? Should I use it for movies? Games? Absolutely no idea.
I've toyed with it on occasion but always land back on disabling the entire thing because it makes some sounds come out "weird" for the lack of better term.
Can anyone knowledgeable about the subject chime in with WTF this thing is? Should I use it if I have a 2.1 speaker setup? Is it good for headphones only? What do the options do? I know that Bass amplification and Volume Equalization make everything sound like literal shit (even more confusing why Bass Amp is on by default), but what does the Spatial Audio or 3D Effects do? They are mutually exclusive and I am torn because it sounds "maybe better in some cases" and "weird/bad" in other cases. Should I touch the Equalizer? Advanced settings? I have frankly no idea.
Included some screens but the texts are in Czech. The stupid thing is probably latching on to system locale (hate when programs/apps do that) but should serve as an example for people to be able to check it out themselves.
The main reason I'm posting it is because it re-enabled itself after I recently performed a Windows update. Why is it even something that's on in Windows by default? I always have it off, but just going to ask here in case I'm missing something.
Post edited August 08, 2023 by idbeholdME