Since the machine needs to slow down to take sharp corners, this means corners get over-burnt, while long straight lines end up lighter. Older versions of Grbl do not have this feature, and simply run the laser at a constant power output for the duration of a cut. In this mode, Grbl adjusts the laser power as the machine speeds up and slows down, making for very consistent cutting and marking. The second is a feature called variable power mode, or the M4 command. Laser mode eliminates the pauses that happen when changing power output, because Grbl knows it's controlling a laser which reacts instantly, instead of waiting for a spindle to change RPM. The first is Laser Mode, enabled by setting $32=1 in the firmware settings. The more recent versions of Grbl (1.1f and up) support two things that are incredibly useful for lasers.
Luckily this is easy to change, and easy to switch from one to the other. The "standard" way a CNC machine is configured is somewhat different from the way laser machines often are. It is highly configurable, and this is both a blessing and a curse. Grbl firmware was originally designed for CNC machines and 3D printers, with laser support added more recently.
The value in LightBurn is called "S-Value Max", in the Device Settings.