I'll consider upgrading my card soon, hopefully the prices drop a bit more. While recording gameplay, it is too much for my graphics card to handle, as the 3D section is frequently maxed out. You do have a good point, I checked again with the performance monitor running. One clip is at 30fps, the other at 60fps, and a third recorded from my phone to try and show that the framerate is only choppy in OBS. Dark souls has flickering & poor framerate, Euro Truck has just flickering, and Doom Eternal is fine. These are all one solid recording of three games on my right monitor (left actually, I labeled it right in OBS then swapped the monitor order a while back). I recorded a few more videos to show this. Maybe it's related to which version of DirectX the game uses? In Euro Truck, only some elements are flickering, and again only in the recording. I'm still not sure why, but 10+ year old games seem to have poor captured framerate and sometimes flickering, 5-10 years has a smooth framerate with flickering, and <5 years records perfectly fine. I did try recording quite a few other games, and realized that not every game does this. Dark Souls still appears to record at ~2 fps despite running at 30+. I tried capturing at 30fps, no difference aside from the video file being at 30 fps as you'd expect. I'm not sure what other out of date drivers might cause problems. I updated it manually (GTX 970, Game Ready Driver v526.47), no difference. Though I did find out that apparently GeForce Experience's driver updating was broken for some reason, as my video driver was about 8 months out of date, and it kept failing to download the latest version. Windows 10 home 22H2 build 19045.2251, settings applet says everything is updated w/ no optional updates. You need to open File Explorer, Web browser or even start menu but you don't want to dox yourself while streaming.As far as I can tell, I've updated everything, and the issue persists. Is there a feature requests somewhere for this?įeature: ability for user to capture a specific program and all of it's right click menus, drop downs and preferences sub-windows WITHOUT capturing any other window from another program that might open on top.Įxample reason: Capturing a tutorial on a single monitor of a software where it's important to show menus. I understand this drive: I also spent many years writing software from which I never expected (or got) any monetary benefit.īlessed is he who expecteth little, for he shall not be disappointed -) Naturally, I recognise that OBS is free software, so nobody has a right to complain about it, but somebody wrote it from the same desire as is driving me to make this tutorial - altruism, I guess - and if issues are not brought to light, they can never be fixed. I'm writing a tutorial to describe the use of a piece of software that uses drop-down boxes when various things are right-clicked, and it's quite frustrating to be telling my audience what I am seeing on the screen without being able to show them. Has any advance in understanding been made since then? Is there a way around this issue? If OBS was making a faithful copy of the screen, as I thought it was, then shouldn't it capture what is on the screen? You clearly know something about this that I don't, but could you please explain it better? and yet, if I use the mouse to bring up a drop-down box (and I tried this in several different contexts - drop-down boxes in different programs, and also in the OS), and I do a "print screen" (Fn-Insert on my laptop), then I go to MS Paint and paste in the image, I see that Prt_Scr has captured the entire screen as seen - complete with the drop-down box.
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