F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming A low-cost capture card may not significantly impact stream quality or FPS.

A low-cost capture card may not significantly impact stream quality or FPS.

A low-cost capture card may not significantly impact stream quality or FPS.

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Kubninjan
Senior Member
389
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#1
Hello, welcome to streaming! I'm curious—will a more affordable capture card impact your FPS on the gaming PC by slowing down data conversion? The quality of the capture matters, but it shouldn't disrupt your stream. There are two options you mentioned; let me check if they perform similarly. Thanks!
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Kubninjan
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #1

Hello, welcome to streaming! I'm curious—will a more affordable capture card impact your FPS on the gaming PC by slowing down data conversion? The quality of the capture matters, but it shouldn't disrupt your stream. There are two options you mentioned; let me check if they perform similarly. Thanks!

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_eptastic_
Member
54
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#2
Choose display capture instead of buying a capture card. OBS is now very lightweight, especially with a Nvidia GPU and NVENC encoding.
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_eptastic_
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #2

Choose display capture instead of buying a capture card. OBS is now very lightweight, especially with a Nvidia GPU and NVENC encoding.

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SwagZor
Junior Member
42
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#3
Capture cards are required only when employing a dual capture setup or for streaming console gameplay. You cannot use a capture card to play or capture on the same computer.
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SwagZor
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #3

Capture cards are required only when employing a dual capture setup or for streaming console gameplay. You cannot use a capture card to play or capture on the same computer.

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Kitty_Kat2013
Junior Member
14
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#4
If the setup remains consistent, all capture cards will reduce speed. Consider a secondary system for streaming to maintain performance. Streaming in 1080p is essential to keep viewers engaged. Use CPU or GPU encoders unless you have the budget for another system.
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Kitty_Kat2013
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #4

If the setup remains consistent, all capture cards will reduce speed. Consider a secondary system for streaming to maintain performance. Streaming in 1080p is essential to keep viewers engaged. Use CPU or GPU encoders unless you have the budget for another system.

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adthelad
Junior Member
6
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#5
I possess a quad-core processor that I aim to utilize as a streaming PC to maintain consistent performance and avoid frame drops. I was hoping this setup would help prevent any interruptions while achieving 250-300 FPS in games.
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adthelad
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #5

I possess a quad-core processor that I aim to utilize as a streaming PC to maintain consistent performance and avoid frame drops. I was hoping this setup would help prevent any interruptions while achieving 250-300 FPS in games.

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Myszor87
Junior Member
45
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#6
Is this a standalone computer? It won’t be your gaming machine, but it could serve as a dedicated streaming setup.
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Myszor87
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #6

Is this a standalone computer? It won’t be your gaming machine, but it could serve as a dedicated streaming setup.

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Huahwho
Junior Member
21
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#7
Yes sir. I have an extra one so I figured I'd give it a try to keep fps and stream stable. If one of the 50-80$ capture cards is good enough to not slow it down, that is. Also, from what I was reading, i will put capture card on main rig, then use hdmi from gpu to capture Edited November 3, 2020 by newtoofps the second part about gpu and capture card
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Huahwho
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #7

Yes sir. I have an extra one so I figured I'd give it a try to keep fps and stream stable. If one of the 50-80$ capture cards is good enough to not slow it down, that is. Also, from what I was reading, i will put capture card on main rig, then use hdmi from gpu to capture Edited November 3, 2020 by newtoofps the second part about gpu and capture card

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ariel_8888
Member
214
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#8
Essentially: GPU → capture card via HDMI in → monitor via HDMI out → system through PCIe → streaming service
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ariel_8888
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #8

Essentially: GPU → capture card via HDMI in → monitor via HDMI out → system through PCIe → streaming service

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MrCarlier
Junior Member
2
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#9
The issue is that your monitor will probably only support 60 frames per second due to the capture card. Therefore, even if you aim for 250-300 fps, you won't notice a difference.
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MrCarlier
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #9

The issue is that your monitor will probably only support 60 frames per second due to the capture card. Therefore, even if you aim for 250-300 fps, you won't notice a difference.

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TehStratosHD
Senior Member
492
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM
#10
To simplify, your main gaming PC will only show what the second computer's capture card is sending. That’s typically for stream viewers, not just your own use.
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TehStratosHD
02-19-2018, 12:38 PM #10

To simplify, your main gaming PC will only show what the second computer's capture card is sending. That’s typically for stream viewers, not just your own use.