
It can either be the same as the base resolution setting, or smaller. The Output (Scaled) Resolution setting determines the resolution of your recorded video. Note that if you don’t see the dimensions you want in the dropdown list where you can manually type in your preferred pixel dimensions with the format, e.g. It can either be the full size of the screen or a smaller portion of it. The Base (Canvas) Resolution setting determines the area, in pixels, you wish to capture from your screen. This is where you’ll set your Capture Size, Output Size, Downscaling, and Frame Rate ( FPS) settings. Head to the Video portion of the settings. To get started, open the settings panel by clicking the Settings button at the bottom right of the interface: 1. Optimal Video Capture Settings The video and output settings I’ve arrived at, which we’ll cover below, are for stable, quality, low size video creation. The video has to look good, too: settings should create a good balance between video quality and file size. I found certain combinations of settings were more likely to cause stability issues, while others were rock solid. My experience with OBS has been that, once you get it set up, it’s incredible, but that it can be a little temperamental getting to that point. Now we’re ready to start digging into some more detail, starting with how to configure your video and output settings to suit screen recording. In the last tutorial in our series on OBS for screen recording, we went through a quick-start method to give you a high-level overview of how the software works. When combined with solid audio and video editing software, it is a very powerful and flexible screencast video production tool.


It’s free, open-source, and fully cross-platform - Mac, Windows, and Linux. Open Broadcaster Software, more commonly known as OBS, is a video streaming and recording program.
