![]() With this card, I can stream at 30fps, and have the clean local recording of the raw game at 60fps for when I'm editing later. If I'l streaming 30fps, with OBS I can only record at 30fps, even if I can have a larger local recording resolution. This is bar-none THE most valuable aspect for me. Also, since I run all my feeds through an HDMI matrix, I can easily also do this for desktop games as well as consoles, while still using game cap/window cap for on-system games. While you can hacky-workaround this in OBS with the NDI Output plugin and an NDI recorder, this is WAY easier. Able to run a second recording program (AmaRecTV, a second copy of OBS, etc) and capture a 'clean' game feed with no overlays.And the high framerate means the facial tracking works even better. No fighting to get OBS to let it go so FR can pick it up, no dead-air waiting with me off-screen. Able to send a higher-framerate, lower-resolution feed to things like Facerig from the same camera, allowing instant switching between 'real me' and an animated avatar.Able to use in-game camera functionality (albeit not many modern games use this, older ones still do 'game face' or 'kill cam' snaps).Able to grab at multiple resolutions/framerates for different scenes, to cut down on poor scaling issues, or to create funky multiplied-camera effects.Able to both stream and offer a clean video cam via Discord/Hangout/Skype to co-streamers for integration on their end.I'd constantly have to fight with apps that would grab what it saw as a camera, and figure out which one was keeping OBS from using it. It's still my recommended go-to for anyone looking to get a cap card in the sub-300 range.įirst, it prevents user error. Absolutely! Again, I still would be using the HD60Pro (and still do occasionally for certain setups) aside from the above.
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