Video capture devices confuse the hell out of me. For years Iāve wanted a hardware solution for PC video capture, perhaps something I could also hook a game console up to, but after a string of ill-informed purchases and a box full of cards that didnāt do what I wanted them to do, I settled on a resource-hogging software solution instead.
What I needed was a piece of hardware I could plug in and a button I could press. Thatās exactly what AverMediaās Live Gamer HD offersārecording or streaming 1080p HD game video at the press of a button.
Inside the $199.99 Live Gamer HD box is a small PCI Express card, a DVI to HDMI adapter, HDMI and HDMI to DVI cables, an audio cable and the wholly optional but immensely helpful Hot Button.
The Hot Button is particularly useful because it flashes red when recording or streaming is underway. A long-time user of FRAPS capture software, I canāt tell you how many times I got my hotkey presses mixed up and wound up recording the exact opposite of what I wanted to, filling up my hard drive with raw footage. Having a flashing red light on your desk would likely also be helpful in more intimate situations
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Once the hardware is installed itās time to fire up RECentral, an immensely user-friendly piece of software easy enough for a boneheaded newbie like myself to use. In fact thereās a Newbie setting thatās pre-configured to record 1080p video at 30 frames-per-second. Amateur and Pro settings offer advanced control of recording options, with the ability to save profiles and load them when needed. You can even hook up your mic and talk over the video, as I did with World of Warcraft: Mists of Pandaria.
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After everythingās set up, itās just a quick smack of the button and youāre capturing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSVZhjDmOeM
Hereās one of the first videos I captured, wandering through Guild Wars 2. I wish I could show you the raw footage, but you wouldnāt all fit in my living room.
The Live Gamer HD features a built-in H.264 video encoder, creating high-quality video on-the-fly while keeping the sucking of system resources to a bare minimum, two things the software solutions Iāve used in the past do not do. Hitting the record hotkey for FRAPS is an instant resource hit and frame rate drop, and the video is hugeāweāre talking in the gigabytes for a couple of minutes. The Live Gamer HD on default settings outputs video thatās not much more that 100MB a minute, if that.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PM_Gf0gdfU
The end product is gorgeous, even more so if you donāt mind dropping down to 720p, where the Live Gamer HD starts recording at 60 frames-per-second. Even though YouTube wonāt do 60 FPS the difference is noticeable.
Nestled inside the RECentral software is the ability to stream footage directly from the Live Gamer HD as well. All it took was an account at Twitch.TV. The software logged me in and started the show with a single button press. Iād always imagined it was more complicated than that. Now I feel silly.
All-in-all my time with the Live Gamer HD was largely enjoyable and mildly eye-opening. I did have to juggle video cards aboutāmy current system only has two PCI-E slots and I was dual-wielding NVIDIA GTX 660 TIsāand since this is a pass-through solution thereās no option to hide the mouse cursor, which seems to tick off some people. Otherwise an overall positive experience.
I was looking for a simple solution to HD video capture, and I found it in the AverMedia Live Gamer HD. Long may its glowing red button save me from accidentally broadcasting marital relations to the gaming public.
The AverMedia Live Gamer HD is available at Amazon for $199.99