Question / Help Blurry stream

Kitsunex

New Member
When I stream minecraft It will get blurry when I move its really annoying (when I record a video it's all fine)I have tried anything watched alot of videos but nothing helps me. Can someone give me some information what I can do
PC specs:
I7
Gtx 1050 ti
8 gigabyte ram
Internet upload speed is 10.26 mbps

Thnx in advance
 
Last edited:
Post a log file from a live streaming session where the issue is occurring. A list of specs doesn't help in this case.

Generally, not-enough-bitrate is the primary cause for blur/blocking/artifacting when streaming. Be aware that 1080p60 wants upward of 12mbps; if you're streaming to Twitch, this is twice their stated bitrate maximum. You may need to lower framerate or resolution, or raise the bitrate you're casting at (within your maximum framework). 1080p30 looks decent at 6000kbps, as does 720p60 (only really advised if playing a retrogame with blitting transparency that requires 60fps to show properly on-stream).
 
Post a log file from a live streaming session where the issue is occurring. A list of specs doesn't help in this case.

Generally, not-enough-bitrate is the primary cause for blur/blocking/artifacting when streaming. Be aware that 1080p60 wants upward of 12mbps; if you're streaming to Twitch, this is twice their stated bitrate maximum. You may need to lower framerate or resolution, or raise the bitrate you're casting at (within your maximum framework). 1080p30 looks decent at 6000kbps, as does 720p60 (only really advised if playing a retrogame with blitting transparency that requires 60fps to show properly on-stream).
Post a log file from a live streaming session where the issue is occurring. A list of specs doesn't help in this case.

Generally, not-enough-bitrate is the primary cause for blur/blocking/artifacting when streaming. Be aware that 1080p60 wants upward of 12mbps; if you're streaming to Twitch, this is twice their stated bitrate maximum. You may need to lower framerate or resolution, or raise the bitrate you're casting at (within your maximum framework). 1080p30 looks decent at 6000kbps, as does 720p60 (only really advised if playing a retrogame with blitting transparency that requires 60fps to show properly on-stream).
Why do you need my log file
 
The logfile contains every information in a general format that is required for answering questions. People don't ever need to manually post their computer specs, they need to post a logfile, because in the logfile the required specs are listed. I never read manually posted computer specs, I only rely on the specs listed in a logfile, because people never include all required specs. They assume they do, but actually they don't.

Fixing somebody's issues is actually looking in the logfile at 2 or 3 well-known sections, according to the issue description, and answer according to the log. You can as well post just a log without any description, and in most cases someone can answer what the issue is related to that log.
 
Why do you need my log file
Because it contains troubleshooting and configuration data from the back-end that will allow us to get an idea of what the problem you're experiencing stems from. It's why when you open a thread here, there's a reminder to attach a logfile from a live streaming/recording session where the issue was occurring.

We cannot help you without it.
 
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