CL Burrner
New Member
Hye, how's it going?
Does the NVIDIA app have a game optimizer that optimizes settings for games taking into account recording with OBS?
I'm assuming the NVIDIA app just optimizes your games to run at their max potential on your PC; not taking into account OBS recording
I'm asking if there's an option that optimizes your games to a level that's best for your PC while recording with OBS
This thought mainly comes from this line I saw in the help guide, "Preventing GPU overload mostly boils down to preventing your GPU from doing more work than it has to. If your GPU had infinite processing power, you could go ahead and run all of your games with uncapped framerates. Sadly, that's not the case. GPUs, even the really strong ones, have a limited amount of resources to use to do things. That means if we want to make it do many things (for example, play a game, composite and render OBS scenes, do everything else your operating system wants it to do, run hardware encoding if there's no dedicated chip, etc.), we have to be smart about how much we ask it to do."
Does the NVIDIA app have a game optimizer that optimizes settings for games taking into account recording with OBS?
I'm assuming the NVIDIA app just optimizes your games to run at their max potential on your PC; not taking into account OBS recording
I'm asking if there's an option that optimizes your games to a level that's best for your PC while recording with OBS
This thought mainly comes from this line I saw in the help guide, "Preventing GPU overload mostly boils down to preventing your GPU from doing more work than it has to. If your GPU had infinite processing power, you could go ahead and run all of your games with uncapped framerates. Sadly, that's not the case. GPUs, even the really strong ones, have a limited amount of resources to use to do things. That means if we want to make it do many things (for example, play a game, composite and render OBS scenes, do everything else your operating system wants it to do, run hardware encoding if there's no dedicated chip, etc.), we have to be smart about how much we ask it to do."