Brightness 100%

Blue Screen background

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Custom Color
Opens one color window per detected screen. Drag & fullscreen each.

Screen Testing Tools

Auto Color Cycle

Rapidly cycle through colors to help fix stuck pixels. Run for 20–30 minutes for best results.

OLED Burn-in Test

Display a moving pattern to detect and reduce OLED burn-in artifacts on your screen.

Gradient Smoothness Test

Display smooth gradients to check for color banding and bit-depth issues on your monitor.

Checkerboard Pattern Test

Display pixel-level checkerboard patterns to test monitor sharpness and pixel response.

Pixel Response Time Test

Flash rapid black/white transitions to evaluate pixel response time and ghosting.

Viewing Angle Test

Display color bands to help evaluate your monitor's viewing angle consistency.

Gray Uniformity Test

Display 50% gray to reveal backlight hotspots, clouding, and brightness non-uniformity.

Color Accuracy Checker

Display reference color swatches to compare against known standards for calibration checks.

Timer Mode

Set a timer for fullscreen display. Useful for timed screen tests and ambient lighting sessions.

Multi-Monitor Detection

Detect connected displays and open fullscreen color on all screens simultaneously.

Drag each window to a different monitor, then click Go Fullscreen inside it.

About Blue Screen

A blue screen isolates the blue sub-pixel channel for precise display testing. Blue sub-pixels are typically the smallest and dimmest in most LCD panel technologies, making them the most common source of sub-pixel defects. Testing with pure blue can reveal issues that other colors miss.\n\nBlue light is also important to understand for eye health. Extended exposure to blue light from screens can contribute to digital eye strain and may affect sleep patterns by suppressing melatonin. Testing your monitor's blue output can help you calibrate night mode or blue light filter settings.\n\nFor creative professionals, a blue screen provides cool-toned ambient lighting for photography and video production. It creates a calm, professional atmosphere often used in corporate video backgrounds and product photography.\n\nDisplay calibration experts use blue screens as part of color accuracy testing, comparing the displayed blue against reference values to verify proper color rendering across the sRGB and Adobe RGB color spaces.

Frequently Asked Questions – Blue Screen

Blue sub-pixels are typically smaller and require more power in LCD panels. This makes them more prone to failure compared to red and green sub-pixels.

All screens emit blue light. This tool displays pure blue to test your display. For daily use, enable your OS night mode to reduce blue light in the evening.

Yes. Display calibration involves checking pure red, green, and blue channels. This blue screen helps verify your monitor's blue accuracy against reference values.

Pure sRGB blue (#0000FF) corresponds to approximately 450-490nm wavelength, which is in the blue portion of the visible spectrum.