OBS works fine. I use it and i have a
1) Pentium Dual Core (so good)
2) Radeon HD 4650
So yeah.
1) Pentium Dual Core (so good)
2) Radeon HD 4650
So yeah.
I don't think you've set the OBS settings/scenes and stuff correctly.akantor-4 wrote:
I already tried Open Broadcast Software but when i record it show a black screen
CPU doesn't matter that much with streaming, it's just the GPU. I have the 2.66GHz version of OP's CPU and a GTX 650Ti and I can stream at 720p no problem with OBS.Full Tablet wrote:
Get a better CPU
While that might be true in this case, it's generally the opposite, as the CPU has to encode the video in realtime which is not something you just do casually with a low-end cpu and expect any kind of decent quality.YayMii wrote:
CPU doesn't matter that much with streamingFull Tablet wrote:
Get a better CPU
Some mid-tier to high-tier GPUs have h.264 encoding capabilities, but even then the encoding they do is usually of lower quality than CPU encoding.IppE wrote:
While that might be true in this case, it's generally the opposite, as the CPU has to encode the video in realtime which is not something you just do casually with a low-end cpu and expect any kind of decent quality.YayMii wrote:
CPU doesn't matter that much with streaming
How low-end are you talking? Because the C2Q isn't really that far behind compared to this generation's CPUs.IppE wrote:
While that might be true in this case, it's generally the opposite, as the CPU has to encode the video in realtime which is not something you just do casually with a low-end cpu and expect any kind of decent quality.YayMii wrote:
CPU doesn't matter that much with streaming
Hardware encoding will never be better than software encoding unless you somehow make everything work in floats. The only reason they seem so fast now is because they skip critical parts of H.264 encoding such as CABAC.Full Tablet wrote:
Some mid-tier to high-tier GPUs have h.264 encoding capabilities, but even then the encoding they do is usually of lower quality than CPU encoding.
http://www.behardware.com/articles/828- ... -x264.html
Anything dualcore basically, which for some reason still exist.YayMii wrote:
How low-end are you talking? Because the C2Q isn't really that far behind compared to this generation's CPUs.
Many recording software have a "synchronize application's fps" (or something similar) option to make the recording fps be the same as the game's fps. See if you can disable that option, or see if you can record a Screen Area that contains the game instead of making Xplit hook to the game.Primula wrote:
The issue that I found with using XSplit was that it reduces the FPS of your gameplay to roughly the FPS you set in XSplit, I have no idea why.
Setting the FPS in XSplit to 60 helps a bit but you'll still experience the lag on faster maps, OBS doesn't behave this way.
The only issue I've found with using OBS is that it'll bug out if you download a map and open it in Osu from the browser, for some reason this causes the FPS of the stream playback to drastically decrease (though it does not have any impact on your gameplay), restarting the stream fixes the issue.
Open Broadcaster can only display windows using DirectXakantor-4 wrote:
I already tried Open Broadcast Software but when i record it show a black screen
You're lagging because you're using up a majority of the 1 GB of ram you have.akantor-4 wrote:
ive buyd a GTX650 asus 1GB GDDR5 i hope i can stream wit this one