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You can also adjust your brightness in various settings such as nvidia control panel since it's a g-sync monitor.
It can help in some games however with regards to Gamma, especially if you Live-Stream or Recording Videos.
Overall most Monitors have a button that switch through all the preset profiles it has on-board.
Like; RGB, Standard, Theatre, Gaming, Night-Time...
On my monitors I like to leave all of these as-is, so they have a certain level of accuracy depending on my needs; but the one profile such as Standard, I tend to never have a use for, so I go into the monitor's menu settings and edit that one more to my liking, such as lower levels of Blue for when using/working with an OS Desktop for lengthy periods, and to have lower levels of Brightness/Contrast as you deem fit for such needs.
Also most Monitors come with a Demo Mode enabled, disable this and then switch through the various onboard profiles and see what is best for you to use for things such as: OS Desktop | Movies | Games | etc...