As far as the whole ETTR or Expose To The Right mantra: 10,12 years ago, it made total sense to do that. But, you know what? The new Nikons, with their wide-DR sensors, and better software, have allowed Nikon shooters to recover under-exposed shadows in software, to a degree that was simply IMPOSSIBLE when the majority of the earlier ETTR manifestos were written. The ability of newer software applications to "lift" under-exposed shadows, has become very advanced, over just the last few years. There was a time, that I remembr, when "digital fill light" had not yet been invented, nor had "recovery", not even "clarity" sliders...I man NONE of this stuff was aailable back when the ETTR manifestos were first written. We are no longer shooting on Nikon D1 cameras, or D100 cameras!!!
Under the old theory, a high-megapixel sensor would have utterly garbage results at higher ISO levels...there was a time when people thought the Nikon D700's 12-megapixel images would be vastly superior to those of the 36-megapixel Nikon D800's images; that little delusion and holding onto the past fantasy lasted about two months. Look at the Fred Miranda tests in the link above, and you can see that older sensor technology versus newer, state-of-the-art sensor technology means that Expose To The Right is no longer the fundamental gospel that it once was. oldhippy's image above shows just how far sensor technology has come.
When I first came to TPF, wayyy back in 2009, Pentax introduced a new APS-C K-series d-slr. At that time, there were some posts about grossly, deliberately under-exposing, at the equivalent speed and f/stop of ISO 54,000, which produced basically a BLACK frame, straight out of camera. But the user, using RawTherapee as I recall, as his raw image converter, was able to "lift" the shadows from pure black, to make a pretty decent image. That was back at the very start of the Sony Exmoor-generation sensors. That is about the time that the ETTR mantra became officially outdated in practical, real-world use. What ONCE was gospel, became merely historical information, in a day-to-day type sense.