

I find it VERY hard to believe that Ryzen will do medium preset or even fast with a game running, even if the game isn't that CPU taxing.Īlso, it still seems like you haven't read my post. that way you take away the stress off the CPU even more and and "lower" the preset for even more quality in OBS i suggest using the GPU and then encode with the CPU. and the encoding preset might have to be set to a higher preset.
#Quicksync h.264 720p
Now ryzen will have no issues at encoding 720p 60fps at "fast" or even "medium" - but remember that if you have a game that is very CPU taxing. And enables more parameters in the h264 encoding for better quality. Well "faster" is twice the performance taxing as "veryfast". However recently more and more people start to stream with 5-6mbit to have nice almost pixel free stream.ītw the hardware encoder in nvidia cards have not changed. Also every big streamer is doing 720p for a reason. If you really wanted that, get a dedicated capture/streaming box so that the gaming computer is totally unaffected by doing extra work. Plus people are just so anal about not losing game performance while streaming yet want to maintain quality. That and the possibility of Twitch and YouTube just re-encode everything with heavy compression anyway such that it doesn't really matter what kind of quality you're trying to achieve, it's just going to be butchered on the other side.
#Quicksync h.264 1080p
What's being posited here is that the quality of using a hardware encoder, especially at 3500 kbps, is acceptable for streaming purposes and OP is suggesting that 3500 kbps is too low for 1080p video anyway. So I find it hard to take those articles seriously when nobody's looked at again at some depth recently (feel free to find some recent stuff) However, a lot of the material I found when I went digging on this topic last week were articles that were several years old. Well sure, hardware encoders have a problem of being fixed function, at least back when they were first released.
#Quicksync h.264 install

#Quicksync h.264 how to
Refer to your motherboard's user manual on how to access and configure this option, you can follow this guide here (take note that the BIOS settings may vary between manufacturers, so please check your manufacturer's website and manuals to make sure you are doing it correctly, since we simply can not provide instructions for various set-ups).


Support Home Video Codecs Activating Intel Quick Sync
