Do you have a question about gameplay? How does it record and how high is the picture quality?
Do you have a question about gameplay? How does it record and how high is the picture quality?
My graphics card is an MSI GeForce GTX 1650 Super with 4GB of RAM and a CPU that uses a Ryzen 7 2700x. My monitor is set to 1366 by 786 pixels. Even though I use GeForce Experience settings to try for 1080p recording, my video keeps coming out at 720p when I upload it to YouTube at 60 frames per second. Can I record in 1080p? If I upgrade to a Full HD monitor, will that make gaming feel better or cause any problems? Does making the screen resolution bigger help the gameplay look smoother even though my current settings are lower than what is possible?
You cannot record at a setting higher than what is already displayed on your screen. You can force a higher recorded size using the "Dynamic Surfactant Resolution" option in the NVIDIA control panel. Also, if you run the game at a high output resolution instead of a standard one, it will make things run slower, but all other settings stay the same.
As we talked before, any tool you use will only work with the screen size of the video clip it captures. DSR (Dynamic Super Resolution) is how Nvidia tries to make things look bigger, but it also costs just as much in performance as actually playing at that higher resolution. With your computer specs, you probably need to limit yourself to playing games at 1080p or 1440p when using DSR. You can turn on this feature by going to Nvidia Control Panel and choosing Manage 3D settings, then clicking on DSR Factors. Just make sure every single box is checked under DSR Factors before you click apply. Playing in DSR at those higher resolutions shows you exactly what games your computer specs can handle without breaking anything. You should also check the system requirements listed by each game developer to see if their needs match yours. If you are unsure, UserBenchmark.com is a great place to compare them easily. Just type "your hardware" and "required hardware" into a Google search, and the first link will take you straight to userbenchmark.com.