![]() The environment is different due to drivers, software, settings, etc. If you still experience performance issues, can you please open a new thread and link my username (Put an in-front of my username) to it so I can be notified and then try to further assist in troubleshooting.Įvery system configuration is different, even if it has exactly the same hardware. Do note that your viewers may be affected by this as your bitrate is their download rate they have to have to watch your stream without buffering/hitching issues. ![]() This means you can actually increase your bitrate if you desire, to assist in improving quality. The good news is you don't have any issue in regards to bandwidth/network frame loss. You will have to wait until a later patch addresses the optimization issues, unless there is a fix/work-around in forums somewhere (Could also try Reddit, not just dev/game forums) Not owning the game, so only having benchmark videos from YouTube to go by.Įscape from Tarkov appears to be very un-optimized at present, CPU & GPU usage seems well down on what it should be, giving hardware similar to yours used the benchmarks. You could try using x264 encoder (CPU) which will net you better quality output when streaming, as it is far superior to h264 encoding (GPU) It will also take some of the load off your GPU though will put ~90% of the load onto your CPU.ĭo you recall any windows/hardware (Graphics, etc) updates around the time you started experiencing frame rate drops? Very large files can be detrimental to performance as well. How large are the files for your media sources? Try to avoid V-Sync as it can induce input lag. I recommend using MSI AfterBurner or EVGA Precision to cap your fps to your monitor refresh rate, or 1-3 frames higher than your monitor refresh rate will generally resolve the issue of screen tearing. Limiting your frame rate in-game will help a lot in getting the best quality out of your hardware in regards to streaming. You can reduce the resolution to 1280x720, keeping the frame rate at 30 for better performance. Your webcam resolution is not needing to be that high for a small overlay, unless you are doing a podcast type stream where it is more or less a full screen webcam output. On another note, I noticed you are using a 64 bit version of Windows, why not use the 64 bit version of OBS your log file you have some minor rendering lag (3.6% of 300,000+ frames) I have an older generation i5 2500 non-k and for resource intensive games (Battlefield 4, for example) it causes drops in fps in game play and subsequent encoder lag due to the SKU hitting 100% on all cores. ![]() To note, your CPU is a 4 core without Hyper Threading, so it could very well be the limiting factor in terms of your game and recording fps overall. If you are insistent on pushing as much quality as possible into your recordings then using CQP 8-16 should net you just about 'lossless' quality.įor more configuration info on parameters:įor a general reference of what your Rx 480 should be capable of at different output resolutions: It is by far the best mode for local recording for an amd card as from my testing it impacts game fps the least, has best stability on recording fps as well. VBR_LAT mode will adjust the bit rate on the fly whilst using low latency input, which allows for reasonably good file size output for great quality recordings. If doing local recording, you are better off with using VBR_LAT mode, setting to 50k target bit rate and 90k peak bit rate to allow your card to flex its muscle when it needs to. You can hover over the drop-down box to see the number references for what resolution you are recording at (Output, not your game resolution) Think of this setting as more of a concrete slab to build upon than anything else, at least from what I have tested. Encoder Profile Level settings are direct references for the encoder to work with in regards to resolution output.
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