RE:
Italicized
What?!
You are
literally arguing against a scientific standard of measure that an
entire industry uses to develop and market its technologies. Both "punch in its picture" and "ability to dim and shine every individual pixel" means nothing; the first is not quantifiable and the second is playground level of debate. Yet you are implying I am just throwing around terms without understanding them.
RE:
Bolded
Again, what?!
You are effectively living in a fantasy world where OLED has magical properties that imbue its technology to be brighter than measurement tools read they are.
Dolby Vision, an industry standard, calls for a reference level maximum of 4,000 nits. LG's 2018 OLED series (let's look at the E8, LG's flagship set)
hits below 1,000 nits. Samsung's flagship TV, on the other hand, is
touted as displaying a brightness between 1,5000 - 2,000 nits.
Reviews corroborate this. There is, without a doubt, a contest in luminosity when these 2 sets are displayed next to each other.
You can enjoy your OLED, I am not taking that away from you. The reality is that OLED's weakness is in its upper-end luminosity and that is not subjective.