We won’t focus on it due to us mostly working with benchmark routines, but it’s definitely worth considering. ![]() This won’t work in every game as it does require the game to have that trigger built in. If a game developer added it to their game this will allow the game to automatically trigger recordings in Shadowplay, or a boss fight for example. Similarly to the previous part, there is very little to tweak here: you can change the recording quality (this actually goes up to 4K which is cool), and you can set how far back the recording should start, but that’s basically it.Īn addition to that is the ‘Highlights’ concept. That way you’ll end up with recordings of your favorite moments, without any extra footage to sort through or eating your precious storage space. This will basically keep a recording of the last few minutes (you can set the time), and after you had a great gaming moment you simply tell it to save those last few minutes. Instant replay sorts both the storage and the excess footage issue. Especially for those gamers with limited storage space on their SSD’s, so this is definitely something to keep in mind. Nvidia is doing a pretty good job at limiting the storage space usage of its recordings as well, but even at about 1 GB per 3 minutes of recording it might stack up before you know it. Stats nerds might find reason to complain, but it’s hard to deny that Nvidia kept this extremely accessible for people not deeply involved in tech.īeing able to start/stop recording is great, but chances are you’ll be left with a ton of footage, most of which might not be that interesting. There are some basic settings to tweak such as the shortcuts (I prefer using Alt-Z for some games, so changed it to Alt-F11 for example), but it’s all pretty basic stuff and if you’re expecting to tweak fine details you’re out of luck. Press Alt-Z to open the Shadowplay overlay for some more details and we’ll see three core elements. Audio quality is equally decent, so no complaints there. Pixel peeping we can see some compression going on, but nothing that really interferes with the point we’re trying to get across: awesome gameplay moments. Default 1080p, 60 FPS and with a 50 Mbps encode quality we find little to complain about, especially considering this content is likely to be shared over social media which limits the quality of the most part anyway. It even records your active discord voice chat, which seems like a convenient thing to have when recording multiplayer audio. You’re gaming, you press alt+f1 to take a screenshot, press alt+f9 to start/stop recording a gameplay video, and that’s it. Obviously, it requires an Nvidia GeForce graphics card to do this (AMD users can check out ReLive software), and that’s what we’re using in our streaming rigs. If not, you unticked the ‘GeForce Experience’ checkbox during the installation and you will want to reinstall it fully to get started. ![]() We’ve also set up our first live stream with it as well.Ĭhances are that if you installed your GPU drivers you already have the software installed. That sounded pretty good to us, so in this part we’re going to find out what recording options there are within Shadowplay and If there is a secret performance loss anyway. However, part of the software package that comes with your Nvidia GeForce graphics card is Nvidia Shadowplay, a tool for which Nvidia says it can “Record and Capture your greatest gaming moments” and “Without worrying about video capture impacting your performance”. This software is used by the majority of streamers to pimp their stream to the extreme. If you’ve given the concept of streaming any thought, chances are that the term OBS will mean something to you. ![]() ![]() This content is also available in Dutch, click here to switch Let’s Stream! Part 5: Nvidia Shadowplay (Guide & Performance) (English)
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