If you find ABL annoying, which many of us do, the Brightness Stabilizer is here to help with that. As for the Brightness Stabilizer, it essentially deactivates the Auto Brightness Limiter (ABL), to prevent oscillations in picture brightness depending on the content currently being displayed, but at the expense of overall brightness. There are also no issues with some Windows UI elements shifting away from sight, which I ran into on several previous occasions, for example, while testing the absurd INNOCN 48Q1V. Corsair found a good balance between how often the picture shifts, and by how much. I usually find this feature distracting and undesirable, but I barely noticed it on the Corsair Xeneon 27QHD240 OLED. This is a way to fight against static UI elements. Orbit is a feature that automatically shifts the image by a couple of pixels while you're using the monitor. Here you can toggle adaptive synchronization, manually start the image retention refresh, and control two important burn-in-preventing features: Orbit and Brightness Stabilizer. The System Setting menu is the second most important one.