Question / Help Constant buffering

Totte

New Member
Hi, does anyone happen to know why I'm getting constant buffering and sometimes freezes at Twitch when watching my own stream while it's running?

I'm running at 3k Bitrate & Buffersize at 720p. Using AMD Video Coding Engine H.264 Encoder.

My specs are Intel i7 3820, 16Gb DDR3, Radeon R9 380.
My internet is 500Mb/s down and 50Mb/s up.

If I'm running the exact same settings at Youtube gaming, I'm lag free. No buffering what so ever.
 

alpinlol

Active Member
for twitch this bitrate is too high if you are not partnered and with an i7 3820 you can use x264 for encoding without a problem
 

Totte

New Member
for twitch this bitrate is too high if you are not partnered and with an i7 3820 you can use x264 for encoding without a problem

Thanks for the reply. God I hate Twitch's partnership program :P That I like about Youtube Gaming, pretty much no restrictions. Too bad Youtube Gaming is only in beta so far. The chat needs work and a place for "panels" like Twitch got would be nice.

Edit: What would be the highest recommended for Twitch?
 
Last edited:

alpinlol

Active Member
Thanks for the reply. God I hate Twitch's partnership program :P That I like about Youtube Gaming, pretty much no restrictions. Too bad Youtube Gaming is only in beta so far. The chat needs work and a place for "panels" like Twitch got would be nice.

Edit: What would be the highest recommended for Twitch?

usually its recommended to stay somewhere around 1500-2500 for some lucky streamers even up to 3500 can be working out, but since you already have issues you are not a part of the lucky guys :(
 

FerretBomb

Active Member
720p@30fps, 2000kbps on x264 Veryfast is the recommended point.

The Partner program only determines if you have transcoding options from the moment you start your stream; partners still have people buffer, just those that do can go to a lower quality option and still watch. Non-partners don't (reliably) have that, so most people will just leave for a non-buffering stream.

Twitch doesn't have the infrastructure or resources that YouTube does, so they can't give everyone transcoding, or deal with the massive (and growing) throughput.
 
Top