Shadowplay for AMD with VCE setup
Shadowplay for AMD with VCE setup
In short, no, even Lagarith YV12 loses colors. You can get it close though in Openencodevfw with the right settings. The only way to not lose color is to capture in Lagarith RGB which is a huge space hog. VCE defaults to BT.709 Full Range - Level 4.1, which is the bottom picture and the shittiest of them all. For best results, set your Openencode up to be BT.709 Full Range with level 4.2 http://imgur.com/a/zjSMJ <--- its better to view these in fullscreen on the album. Note the differences in the fonts and in some cases the entire image is much more dull. This is an in-game screen shot, no encoding This is Lagarith RBG This is Lagarith YV12 This is VCE BT.709 Full Range - Level 4.2 This is VCE BT.709 Full Range - Level 4.1
So you're looking for the best VCE configurations beyond just color settings. It sounds like you're trying to optimize performance and quality for your system. With an i7 4770k and R9 290, recording at 7200rpm on a standard drive should work, but tweaking things might help. Your current setup gives decent results, yet the video feels less sharp than in Lagarith. That could be due to encoding differences or audio routing. If you split the audio, both game and mic are audible, which is good. Consider adjusting bitrate, resolution, and codec settings next time for a clearer comparison.
Level 4.2 reaches its limit at 50Mbps, level 5.0 or above allows more but isn't essential. Click Quality and choose VBR 50000kbps, or use CBR for consistent file sizes. A constant bitrate ensures predictable sizes but uses extra bits on inactive content. At 50Mb/s the drive speed isn't a concern and comfortably supports 1080p30. For local recordings, higher bitrates are preferable to maintain quality before compressing for YouTube. A 50Mbps CBR delivers about 22.5GB per hour. VBR can reach up to 50Mbps but not consistently, resulting in smaller files.
It shouldn't appear blurry unless the recording was below 1080p. These problems seem to stem from dxTory, not the codec affecting audio. Capture a screenshot of your dxTory video tab.
The file is recorded at 1080p, but the properties show 1080 as well. It might be due to an older version of Dxtory. I’m using the newer version for consistency. 2.0.127. Hope you get it!
Yes, I have VLC media player. It can save a snapshot that captures the blurry effect.
You're facing a problem where OpenEncodeVFW isn't installing on Windows 10. It seems to function well with VCE on Windows 8.1, but you're seeking more advanced tools like Dxtory or MSI Afterburner for better control. If you need assistance, someone familiar with these platforms might be able to help.