Bluray — Remux 4k |work|

Mobile devices, slow internet connections, small (<55") screens, or viewers unable to distinguish Blu-ray from good web-dl.

| Misconception | Reality | |---------------|---------| | "A remux is re-encoded" | False – remuxing changes container, not codec. | | "All 4K remuxes have Dolby Vision" | False – only if source disc had it and remuxer preserved both layers. | | "MKV loses quality compared to M2TS" | False – MKV holds identical streams; only container overhead differs. | | "Remux means smaller than disc" | Yes, but only 10-20% smaller, not 50%+. | | "You can play a remux on any 4K TV" | False – many built-in USB players choke on 80 Mbps HEVC + TrueHD. | bluray remux 4k

If you have a 4K HDR TV, a sound system, and plenty of hard drive space, is the "Gold Standard" for home media libraries. | | "MKV loses quality compared to M2TS"

As bandwidth improves and HDD prices drop, 4K Remuxes are becoming a realistic archiving standard for enthusiasts. Furthermore, support for formats like (a more efficient codec) may eventually challenge HEVC remuxes, but for the foreseeable future, the HEVC 10-bit Remux remains the master standard for quality. | If you have a 4K HDR TV,