Videos in 1080p60 and 1440p60 resolutions
Videos in 1080p60 and 1440p60 resolutions
Hey guys, As you know youtube has enabled 1080p 60fps videos which improves gaming videos on Youtube. There are also 1440p and 4k @30fps but i guess gaming vids should be better on 60fps or more in terms of fluidness, no matter the resolution. However we all want higher quality of video, not just fluidness. Well there is a solution to that, but it is not that smart: after editing your video on 1440p 60fps, to upload it on a torrent and have a link in the description, and downscale that 1440p60fps vid to 1080p60fps to upload it to Youtube. It is so that people who want it on higher quality to just download it without having to stream it, which itself depends on their internet speed. (Is this possible in Sony Vegas pro editing software??) Now 4K vids can have some astronomical numbers even at 30fps. Not mentioning 60 here since you can not reach it with single gpu, not mentioning recording it. But as we said, it better be 60fps than 30fps...so if you got the power and storage, give it a try. The point is to put some use into those 4K tvs and monitors, which for now are just for gaming purposes for consumers anyway...why not a bit more content? If you have recorded 1440p 60fps video (using Shadowplay or whatever method), can you tell me the size of it, completely uncompressed? I wanna know how big the file would be at about 10-15 min of video at 1440p 60fps. Say the bitrate too.
We captured a 50MBPS file at 1440p 60fps using ShadowPlay, resulting in 2.15GB for the 8-minute, 30-second recording of the Evolve beta.
It seems the video quality might be affected by internet issues or low screen resolution.
The internet can be an issue for me as well, so it might be better to save it instead of streaming it if you can't get 1080p. I don't just want those with big screens and fast connections to have the advantage—everyone should be able to benefit.
Don't stress, you'll manage it. Before starting, confirm your system has sufficient storage (40gb/15 minutes video), reliable internet for downloads, and a 4K display for viewing. Initially, you'll likely play mostly MMOs—possibly including GTA 5 if it's well-optimized. Be careful not to overheat the GPU this year!