Well, the whole point of room correction through EQ is that you don't have to change anytz else ... at least in theory.
Without knowing which smartphone/microphone you used for RC, the RC configuration (target curve, max. gain, max. Q) and the actual measurement result (the evaluation run) it's mostly impossible to tell if you should change something. Room size also plays a role. Speaker placement and MLP would be the first things to look at.
Generally speaking there are few microphones providing reliable data down to 30 Hz (with no calibration file used). With smartphone mics I wouldn't even attempt to correct anything below 50 Hz (at least).
If there really is such a massive peak around 85 Hz that needs this hefty correction might be visible in the actual measurements.
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