It is also probably due to "binaural audio" often relying on the left and right channels being exactly out of phase with each other, which is the opposite of mono compatible. Most music still tries to be somewhat mono compatible.Nogyoff wrote: ↑Sat Jun 11, 2022 11:07 pmIn order to really feel the binaural effect, there is a lot more going on then just stereo widening, and I just don't perceive it with music mixed and encoded in dolby atmos, in headphones. Part of the reason, I think, is just that music is too dense, and too many tracks to hear this spatialization in headphones.
Which is why binaural audio productions are usually specifically produced to be binaural in the first place and why they keep saying you have to wear headphones for it to work. because only then will you have fully artificial stereo separation