Cyber Akuma
New Member
I don't stream, I just occasionally capture footage either just to store some moments I want to keep or just to upload a small clip to YouTube.
Because of this I don't need to encode on the fly, so usually I like to capture using codecs that don't actually encode the video much and just impact the cpu/gpu as little as possible to dump as much lossless un-encoded video as reasonably possible to software encode later.
I used to use Fraps for this as that's how it's own custom codec used to work, but it's pretty obsolete and useless nowadays. I am still new to using OBS in place of Fraps, and configuring it's capture settings to do this is one of the things I am trying to figure out.
I noticed that it only seemed to let me encode either by x264 software or NVENC, unless I enable more advanced settings and make it go through ffmpeg, at which point I get a ton of options. I also used to use Huffyuv as my capture codec before, but that's pretty old and outdated nowadays too... also from my understanding, Huffyuv only works with AVI containers (Though OBS seems to let me use it for MP4 containers, but not MKV, not sure if it will work outside of AVI though). I was wondering if there is any modern (hopefully somewhat smaller filesize too) version of Huffyuv to use with OBS? And if not, what would someone recommend I do to capture a temporary video intended to impact the CPU/GPU as little as possible and be as lossless as possible for the purposes of CPU-encoding it into something sane later?
Because of this I don't need to encode on the fly, so usually I like to capture using codecs that don't actually encode the video much and just impact the cpu/gpu as little as possible to dump as much lossless un-encoded video as reasonably possible to software encode later.
I used to use Fraps for this as that's how it's own custom codec used to work, but it's pretty obsolete and useless nowadays. I am still new to using OBS in place of Fraps, and configuring it's capture settings to do this is one of the things I am trying to figure out.
I noticed that it only seemed to let me encode either by x264 software or NVENC, unless I enable more advanced settings and make it go through ffmpeg, at which point I get a ton of options. I also used to use Huffyuv as my capture codec before, but that's pretty old and outdated nowadays too... also from my understanding, Huffyuv only works with AVI containers (Though OBS seems to let me use it for MP4 containers, but not MKV, not sure if it will work outside of AVI though). I was wondering if there is any modern (hopefully somewhat smaller filesize too) version of Huffyuv to use with OBS? And if not, what would someone recommend I do to capture a temporary video intended to impact the CPU/GPU as little as possible and be as lossless as possible for the purposes of CPU-encoding it into something sane later?