This amendment concerns the general ranking criteria audio section.
Current rule: "A beatmapset's audio file must use the .mp3 or .ogg file format and have an average bit rate no greater than 192kbps."
Rule modification proposal: "A beatmapset's audio file must use the .mp3 or .ogg file format. Its quality must obey a maximum limit of 192kbps constant bitrate for .mp3 and VBR6 level for .ogg"
Given that the .ogg file format has seen a steady rise in popularity and is more common every day as the format of choice for beatmapsets, revising the audio bitrate rule seems only logical. This rule is inheritly flawed for analyzing .ogg files and therefore an update is long overdue.
This proposal changes nothing for .mp3 files and rankability regarding their bitrates.
In this proposal we will be considering audio files exported from Audacity as this is by far the most common audio manipulation program used by mappers and BN/NAT members alike.
An .ogg is a file format that does not use an explicit constant bitrate. Rather it uses a quality setting from 0-10 which roughly corresponds to an average bitrate in mp3 as described by Audacity . The problem with this is that the .ogg quality setting 6 (from now on referred to as VBR6) is supposed to correspond to a 192kbps bitrate, but in practice the bitrate can be slightly different. This can be seen as highlighted in this example.
In the example above the currently rankable options would be an mp3 with a lot of clipping or an .ogg VBR5 file which corresponds to an average bitrate of 162kbps. By allowing VBR6 to be rankable we would allow greater quality audio in some scenarios at near-negligable filesize changes. As shown in the linked post the difference in filesize is negligable (on a 2 minute song there is a difference of 0.11MB).
peppy's reasoning for enforcing a 192kbps limit initially in the ranking criteria was: "Note that the bitrate rules are NOT for legal reasons as people may have incorrectly stated, but to ensure downloads size is within acceptable limits (especially important as we push forward with mobile platforms)."
This will change audio moderation during the ranking process as we can simply be concerned with finding the highest quality audio format and not have to compromise on .ogg quality due to a fundamentally flawed rule.
Current rule: "A beatmapset's audio file must use the .mp3 or .ogg file format and have an average bit rate no greater than 192kbps."
Rule modification proposal: "A beatmapset's audio file must use the .mp3 or .ogg file format. Its quality must obey a maximum limit of 192kbps constant bitrate for .mp3 and VBR6 level for .ogg"
Given that the .ogg file format has seen a steady rise in popularity and is more common every day as the format of choice for beatmapsets, revising the audio bitrate rule seems only logical. This rule is inheritly flawed for analyzing .ogg files and therefore an update is long overdue.
This proposal changes nothing for .mp3 files and rankability regarding their bitrates.
In this proposal we will be considering audio files exported from Audacity as this is by far the most common audio manipulation program used by mappers and BN/NAT members alike.
An .ogg is a file format that does not use an explicit constant bitrate. Rather it uses a quality setting from 0-10 which roughly corresponds to an average bitrate in mp3 as described by Audacity . The problem with this is that the .ogg quality setting 6 (from now on referred to as VBR6) is supposed to correspond to a 192kbps bitrate, but in practice the bitrate can be slightly different. This can be seen as highlighted in this example.
In the example above the currently rankable options would be an mp3 with a lot of clipping or an .ogg VBR5 file which corresponds to an average bitrate of 162kbps. By allowing VBR6 to be rankable we would allow greater quality audio in some scenarios at near-negligable filesize changes. As shown in the linked post the difference in filesize is negligable (on a 2 minute song there is a difference of 0.11MB).
peppy's reasoning for enforcing a 192kbps limit initially in the ranking criteria was: "Note that the bitrate rules are NOT for legal reasons as people may have incorrectly stated, but to ensure downloads size is within acceptable limits (especially important as we push forward with mobile platforms)."
This will change audio moderation during the ranking process as we can simply be concerned with finding the highest quality audio format and not have to compromise on .ogg quality due to a fundamentally flawed rule.