Having a game running on its own can sometimes be resource-heavy. You can try to minimize the settings on the game to reduce the resources needed. Doing this could lighten the load on the CPU and free up resources to be used elsewhere. OBS and other streaming software consume resources while open in the background.
Unfortunately, this CPU usage will increase as more elements are added as overlays and streaming components. If you have a complex overlay, browser sources, gifs and more in your broadcasting software, strip it all down to the bare minimum and see if problems persist. Encoding on most streaming software is completed by the CPU as a default option.
This option might not be the best if you have a low performing chipset and have other applications that need the processing power more.
To work around this issue most graphics cards allow for GPU encoding which can be found in your streaming platform. This will redirect and encoding work to be done through a chip on the GPU and should free up resources from the CPU without bringing performance down on your game. Google Chrome is notorious for using incredibly large amounts of CPU when idling or doing a whole lot of nothing. This could often be the root of a few problems so try closing un-needed windows or switch browsers to something more lightweight.
If you need to have a browser open to view or stream or read your chat, you can open your chat in a single pop-out window that will reduce CPU usage. Alternatively, you can open your stream on your phone to check the quality and read chat without impacting CPU. For example, hard-drive backups running, anti-virus scans and more things to sink CPU into. Go through the list from top to bottom and end the processes that are high in resource consumption but not needed for streaming.
Doing it this way, you can control what you get and how much you spend. Plus its great fun! When it comes to Twitch, there always seems to be some controversy around who's doing what and how things should be run.
The latest event to enter the crosshair is the rampant rise of Casino streams Internet connection is a bigger problem and is comparatively difficult to know and solve.
As a streamer, you have to be very careful about it. Having a good internet connection is a must and also to make sure that you are getting a consistent bandwidth throughout the day.
The best way to check your internet speed is by running a quick and simple speed test. Just check your internet through a speed test whenever you are going over to twitch. This speed test will give a good idea of how the internet is performing. If the internet connection is slower than expected then doing a few tweaks would greatly help. The reason Twitch won't load for you might also be related to issues in a specific country or territory.
There's a quick fix for that—simply use a VPN. Alternatively, if you already use a VPN, this might be the issue behind Twitch streams not loading. In such a case, you might disable your current VPN and see if anything changes for you. Probably the easiest step to take in finding a solution for Twitch lagging is to try using a different browser.
If your twitch stops running for unknown reasons or doesn't even start then it's probably due to your browser. Updating it is also a solution to the problem but if you are too lazy to do that then probably switching over to a different browser e.
Firefox, Opera is the best thing for you. This mostly happens if you are using Chrome as your sole browser. Chrome is notorious for taking up a lot of memory and thus leaving little to nothing for your stream.
You can simply solve this by going to your Chrome settings and turning off "hardware acceleration. Twitch lagging mostly happens if you are using Chrome as your sole browser. Open the Google Chrome browser on your computer by double-clicking its desktop shortcut or by searching for it in the Start menu.
Click on the three horizontal points at the top right of the browser window. It should read: Customize and control Google Chrome when you float above them. This opens a drop-down menu. Click on the Settings option at the bottom of the drop-down menu and scroll down this page to the "Advanced" button. Make sure you click on it. Scroll down the new page again until you reach the System area. To disable hardware acceleration in Google Chrome, clear the Use hardware acceleration checkbox next to the input.
Sometimes videos don't play smoothly because of improper conversion, video file corruption, improper download, and downloading from unverified sources. These deep-rooted technical problems require video repair tools to correct video playback.
There are lots of tools out there that can help you to repair your corrupt videos. Wondershare Repairit - Video repair is one such tool. QwerkyPengwen Splendid Ambassador. Jan 16, 4, 25, When you play a video game, depending on the quality settings, it will use more or less CPU.
It uses a little bit more just to capture your game or display. And even more CPU gets used the more stuff you add to your stream such as overlays, gifs, browser sources, etc. Then change the bitrate to and make sure it's set to software x encoding. Go to base resolution and change it x and set the output to the same. Then set downscale filter to bilinear. You can keep it at 30fps if you like.
Now, hide everything in the stream striping it down to the basics of just the game and your webcam if you use one. Resize these items to fit inside the new base resolution window. Now, go to settings and set the option to record your stream using the same settings as streaming. Then, instead of going live, hit record and record some footage. If there is none, then you can go back in and start enabling a couple of in stream stuff here and there.
Nothing too fancy, just maybe an overlay of some kind that makes it more unique looking to you. Then record again and pay attention to any issues.
Assuming you have more than one monitor where OBS is on a second monitor that you can see while you play games, then take a look at the CPU usage. Also take note of the fps it shows next to the CPU usage which will tell you if there is frames being dropped or skipped at all.
Also, try setting it from high quality to one step down on encoding quality. Alternatively, if you have a bit going on in your stream that uses up enough CPU that you can play our game and have OBS running but don't have enough CPU left over to encode without lowering the game quality and encode quality to low levels, then try using GPU encoding NVENC and set it to normal encode level which should be default this will make a special dedicated chip that is on the GPU do all the encoding so that your CPU doesn't have to.
This chip is exclusive to this kind of purpose and has nothing to do with the other hardware on your GPU and therefore will not impact performance of gaming in any GPU related way. Also, have you left it alone to auto configure your stream settings or did you mess with the settings? If you messed with the settings what did you change them to? QwerkyPengwen :.
0コメント