>your display might have very narrowband primaries for example
I am using a professional display that is intended for color-accurate work, and similarly have other very accurate, calibrated, monitors that show the same results.
> Your vision could also be an outlier of the CIE Standard Observers, thus any calibration attempt will not be super effective.
I've scored near perfectly to perfectly on a variety of Farnsworth Munsell 100 Hue (and inspired) tests using the same displays, and I speak frequently with others who also have to do color accurate work while dealing the Pantone and RAL colors. They universally report the same thing.
Fundamentally if these digital values were good enough, we wouldn't need the physical samples to begin with.
I am using a professional display that is intended for color-accurate work, and similarly have other very accurate, calibrated, monitors that show the same results.
> Your vision could also be an outlier of the CIE Standard Observers, thus any calibration attempt will not be super effective.
I've scored near perfectly to perfectly on a variety of Farnsworth Munsell 100 Hue (and inspired) tests using the same displays, and I speak frequently with others who also have to do color accurate work while dealing the Pantone and RAL colors. They universally report the same thing.
Fundamentally if these digital values were good enough, we wouldn't need the physical samples to begin with.