![]() I got my settings from googling and some YT tutorials, look out for JackFrags video on Sony Vegas, it explains a lot. 30/48/60 fps do not require this.īest thing to do for you is to find your own sweetspot I guess. keep this disabled for game footages, this is used for movies at peasant 24-25fps ranges to blend frames for less stutter (merges 2 frames), it can make your game footage funky and unrealistic. Max Bitrate: 32Mbs (if algorithm picks up heavy changes (like fast camera rotation), it might bump up your Mbs, but it's kinda shitty and I usually ignore this setting).įrame blending: Disabled (it's called differently for Sony Vegas). Safe values for for me were always 16-24Mbs. The higher you go, the less quality you lose when dowscaled by youtube. Higher resolutions or framerates will need this value higher. If I only record desktop (ie scripting tutorial), there is not much shit changing, so I might even go down to 8Mbs to save on file size. Target Bitrate: 12-32Mbs.This one highly depends on what I record. VBR can sometimes backfire, but CBR usually means bigger file sizes. CBR is constant bitrate, means it stays same no matter how often scene changes (good for FPS games, tbh). VBR stands for variable bitrate (2 bitrates, see below). Render at Max depth disabled (don't care, negligible gain due to downscale, much longer render times)īitrate enc: VBR 1 pass (You can go 2 pass, but difference is minimal, much longer render times). Higher level does not really mean much better quality, it diminishes very fast, longer render times. Level: 4.2 (no need for higher because of YT downscale). While I prefer 1440p vids, my settings for using Premiere would be: Generally since I have good upload (20Mbs), I don't care about file sizes, so I'd upload on higher bitrate and let youtube downscale it, this way you keep some extra quality, but it's not much. ![]() Keep in mind youtube caps bitrate, it used to be 8Mbs for a while ago, not sure if that is still true since update to 60fps, but cap is definitely still there. Fast hard drive helps, these guys are potential bottlenecks when doing high bitrates enabled by NVENC. I am using Shadowplay to record 1440p videos at 30fps around Blu-ray ranges (24-32Mbs) to an SSD. Higher bitrates are good way to recover from quality loss, x264 is still the king at lower bitrates. ![]() ![]() Your recording settings seems to be a bit overkill, but since it's shadowplay and 60fps, feels right more or less.
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