malenurse said:Dang, now I finally understand why I could never hear anything during The Mandalorian and, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.YouBet said:
Fascinating because this tells me I'm not crazy. I would add one more random element to this from the streaming platform side of this. Certain streaming platforms are lower in volume than others. Case in point is Disney+. We watch anything on Disney+ about 10 clicks higher than other platforms. For whatever reason, they have a natural lower starting point with volume. And others have noticed the same thing so it's not just me.
Also, the sound compression via streaming is shockingly noticeable if you aren't blessed with a good sound setup at home. You simply don't realize how utterly different it is to watch a Blu-ray movie fully uncompressed with high-end sound codecs vs just streaming it. We have a great home theater set up, but as streaming has become ubiquitous and with 4k video quality increasingly becoming a commodity with AppleTV and Disney+, it's just easier and cheaper to compromise and rent.
And then taking that a step further not all Blu-ray movies with the best sound standards and codecs are created equally either simply because it depends on how good the sound editors were. My reference movie for sound in the home theater is Master and Commander. Specifically, the opening attack scene where his ship is shredded by cannon will blow your mind in an appropriately equipped home theater with good speakers.
Mando's helmet muffled his voice