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  • Windows 11 is getting a new feature to make displays easier on the eyes


    Karlston

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    • 1 comment
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    "Screen Tint" was spotted in the latest preview builds, allowing users to apply different color overlays to your display.

    This week, Microsoft released new Windows 11 preview builds with some pretty substantial changes, including new Windows Update features, reworked Windows Insider channels, and more. As usual, shortly after, enthusiasts started digging out hidden features and upcoming changes. One of those hidden features is the so-called "Screen Tint."

     

    Screen Tint is an upcoming display feature that makes the screen easier on your eyes by applying a color filter. Microsoft says the feature "shows a color overlay on your display to reduce eye strain and improve viewing comfort." While Windows 11 already has the Night Light, which makes the screen warmer on schedule, it is limited to just yellow light. Screen Tint will let you pick among several tints, with each having its own purpose:

     

    • Calm amber: Effective for long screen usage
    • Rose tint: Reduces migraine triggers and fluorescent sensitivity
    • Soft yellow: Helps with visual stress and reading comfort
    • Cool blue: Useful for glare sensitivity, particularly in bright environments
    • Gentle green: Relief from photophobia and white backgrounds
    • Natural grey: Helps those who find stark black-white contrast fatiguing
    Screen Tint settings in Windows 11
    Image by @phantomofearth on X

    Interestingly, Screen Tint is not limited to just six presets. There is also a dedicated "Custom tint" feature that lets you create a custom color overlay for your display. Additionally, you can adjust the filter intensity with a dedicated slider.

     

    Screen Tint is not publicly available yet, so we have to wait for Microsoft to announce its rollout formally, but digging it out in the current build reveals that Microsoft plans to keep the new feature in the Accessibility section, right next to color filters, contrast themes, magnifier, and other screen-related assistive technology.

     

    In case you missed it, release notes for the latest Dev, Beta, and Canary builds are available here and here.

     

    Source: @phantomofearth on X

     

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    Posted Sunday 26 April 2026 at 8:04 am AEST (my time).

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    Until they add proper borders to windows, or allow us to pick the option to have a proper border, all of this is fluff.

    Tint? WTF - how does that allow me to see the difference between two overlapping windows that have the same colour?

    This is maybe useful for some, but worthless to me.

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