Recording In-Game Gameplay
#1
Posted 27 April 2011 - 12:54 AM
I would like to make some RO in-game gameplay videos that more or less tour or show places that are unique or exotic that some players may have not seen yet.
What program would you recommend to record in-game or what program do you use?
I'm looking for HD quality recording that won't hinder my gameplay too much, how much RAM or specs would I need to record efficiently?
#2
Posted 27 April 2011 - 01:16 AM
Example of a HD quality video using FRAPS and WWM.
Edited by Xellie, 27 April 2011 - 01:21 AM.
#3
Posted 27 April 2011 - 06:04 AM
#4
Posted 27 April 2011 - 06:23 AM
#5
Posted 27 April 2011 - 06:48 AM
I believe in choice, so here, have a bunch of choices! Most of these options are good, but have various different ways of doing things. They're ranked (roughly) by ease of use & quality, in my opinion anyway. Fraps is nice and pretty simple, but its lack of options for the price you pay tends to annoy the hell out of me and the interface makes me wish they'd just use native widgets. But anyway, here are some alternatives, some of which are even free.I want to see a tour of some places in RO that I haven't explored yet, but couldn't find a lot and the ones I did fine weren't in HD quality.
I would like to make some RO in-game gameplay videos that more or less tour or show places that are unique or exotic that some players may have not seen yet.
What program would you recommend to record in-game or what program do you use?
I'm looking for HD quality recording that won't hinder my gameplay too much, how much RAM or specs would I need to record efficiently?
http://www.playclaw.com/ - Rather good quality recording
http://www.techsmith.com/camtasia/ - pretty much a pro recording tool, amazing option if you can afford it.
http://dxtory.com/v2-home-en.html - a lot of jRO players use this one, really nice if you've got multiple drives to record to.
http://taksi.sourceforge.net/ - haven't had much experience with this one, but a lot of people seem to use it
http://www.growlersoftware.com/ - same with this one
http://www.wegame.com/download/ - this one is a bit different, has a social sharing component
http://camstudio.org/ - This is what fraps should upgrade to be. Still extremely simple, but with a decent interface.
http://www.gamecamportal.com/ - another option i haven't tried much of, it's supposed to be pretty good though
http://www.xfire.com/ - This is a combination recorder/streamer/im client, its strange, but it works and is free.
I hope you find something else to use other than WMM Xellie, because that video quality hurts my eyes. Sucks, because the content is win. xDI personally use FRAPS ... it might drop your FPS slightly, but it's pretty good with RO. the files are huge but if you use windows movie maker to edit them, it's quick and easy to compress them and throw them on youtube
Example of a HD quality video using FRAPS and WWM.
Using WMM to make HD video is like using a cheese grater to make spaghetti. Sure you'll get something roughly spaghetti-esqe, but it definitely wont be actual spaghetti. The quality indicator on that video may SAY 720p, but that is not 720p video. It's far, far too blurry to be a 720p video, likely because of the WMM codec. If you want good quality 720p video on youtube, after you've captured and edited your footage, compress it with the x264 codec. It's the same codec youtube uses and the best compression/quality ratio out there atm. (most companies doing online video or video delivery use a variant of h.264 like X264 for their video: Youtube, iTunes, all blu-ray discs, most silverlight and flash players, etc). Another advantage is that if you encode it to x264, it wont need to be reconverted (and thus lose more quality) when uploaded to youtube, so the turnaround time for HD playback is much shorter.
If you don't mind spending a bit of cash, Adobe Premiere Elements is a good (and cheap) option for decent video editing. If you're looking for something free, but still advanced, there's also lightworks or cinelerra. If you want something dead simple, there's the web-based video editor Jaycut that supports h.264 editing.
I highly recommended the lifehacker video editing series as it gives a good general introduction to video editing, even if you don't have the specific tools they talk about (premiere and final cut), the concepts carry over very well to other programs.
Edited by rikai, 27 April 2011 - 07:41 AM.
#6
Posted 27 April 2011 - 07:22 AM
#7
Posted 27 April 2011 - 11:44 AM
All of these softwares produce .avi video. Raw video quality won't be far different. What matters for recording game content is: no fps lag and fast writting speed.
Youtube's HD is based on video frame width x height. For Youtube 720p (HD) your video must be at least 1280 x 720.
As for me, my target is 480p (854 x 480). These videos below are recorded with a certain japanese software (GUI is in japanese too) and rendered with Sony Vegas Pro 10.0.
new render setting
old render setting
About CPU spec, I think any dedicated graphic card and 4GB RAM is sufficient to make RO video.
Edited by blitzrick, 27 April 2011 - 11:49 AM.
#8
Posted 27 April 2011 - 12:23 PM
#9
Posted 27 April 2011 - 12:54 PM
http://www.wegame.com/download/ - this one is a bit different, has a social sharing component
http://camstudio.org/ - This is what fraps should upgrade to be. Still extremely simple, but with a decent interface.
I tried to use wegame a lot of times but it never works. If you can tell me how I can use it, I would be happy. (The support told me it is because of RO)
Now I use camstudio
#10
Posted 27 April 2011 - 02:03 PM
#11
Posted 27 April 2011 - 02:09 PM
#12
Posted 27 April 2011 - 07:09 PM
#13
Posted 28 April 2011 - 05:50 AM
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