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How do i fix my shadowplay stuttering videos?

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Lagos, Nigeria
System Name purplekaycee
Processor Core i7 6700
Motherboard Msi z270 titanium
Cooling Cooler Master hyper 212 EVO
Memory 16gb (2x8gb) corsair LPX vengeance
Video Card(s) Gigabyte gtx 1080ti
Storage 1tb Samsung SSD, 4tb Seagate HDD, 8tb Seagate HDD
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Case Cooler Master H500M
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Power Supply Seasonic Focus GX 850. 850W
Mouse Regular mouse
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Software Windows 10 64 bit
Most of my recorded video game play end up stuttering ang lagging. What do I do to fix it?
 
my first guess is your dual core cpu....is the cause of the issue. Being too slow.
 
1. Get better encoding hardware (CPU if using H.264/GPU if using NVENC)
2. Lower your video quality (1080@60p to 1080@30p, or even 720@60/30p)
3. Don't record to the same hard drive the game is installed on
 
The dual core and depends on the game, because that 780 won't be enough in a lot of cases.

Source: I have a G3258/GTX780 machine, literally was setting up WCG on it two minutes ago.
 
Get a GCN card and ReLive. Uses <1% CPU and <3% GPU (because VCE).
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Recommend Polaris or newer for HEVC support.
 
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1. Get better encoding hardware (CPU if using H.264/GPU if using NVENC)
2. Lower your video quality (1080@60p to 1080@30p, or even 720@60/30p)
3. Don't record to the same hard drive the game is installed on
I'd add that the GTX 780 is probably a bit underpowered too, since ShadowPlay uses the GPU. Maxwell or better is recommended.
 

Rule number one when recording with anything ,always write to a hard drive that you're not playing off of ,and if possible , one the OS is not running off of either.

I remember DXtory had a little benchmarking utility for your hard drive ,and it would give you an idea of whether or not you could write and play off the same hard drive or solid-state drive. Anything less than roughly 170 MB per second is a no no
 
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Most of my recorded video game play end up stuttering ang lagging. What do I do to fix it?
Did this problem just start or has it always been this way?

If just started, did you may any recent changes to your system, or how your record?
 
Did this problem just start or has it always been this way?

If just started, did you may any recent changes to your system, or how your record?
Only thing u did was to increase the clock speed on my card using MSI afterburner
 
Get a GCN card and ReLive. Uses <1% CPU and <3% GPU (because VCE).
unknown.png

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Recommend Polaris or newer for HEVC support.

Shadowplay does GPU encoding as well. I see no extra CPU usage when recording.
 
Only thing u did was to increase the clock speed on my card using MSI afterburner
And did you reset it back to the defaults to see if the problem went away?
 
Sorry for reviving. But i saw something on the nvidia forum while searching this issue for myself. A guy says that if you put recording file directory to your HDD and temp file directory is on your SSD, you need to change your temp file location to your hdd as well to get less stuttering on the record.
 
That really makes no sense. For one, many users don't even use hard drives anymore. I don't. And for another, why would a slow hard drive yield better performance than a fast SSD? Even the slowest SSD can run circles around the fastest hard drives.

If that "guy" is saying the file directly and temp file directory need to be on the same drive (regardless drive type), that really makes no sense, in terms of performance, either. The OS cannot access two files at once on the same drive (regardless of drive type). But if two files are located on two different drives, the OS can resulting in faster performance. This is exactly why many users and experts recommend locating temp file locations on a different drive.
 
That really makes no sense. For one, many users don't even use hard drives anymore. I don't. And for another, why would a slow hard drive yield better performance than a fast SSD? Even the slowest SSD can run circles around the fastest hard drives.

If that "guy" is saying the file directly and temp file directory need to be on the same drive (regardless drive type), that really makes no sense, in terms of performance, either. The OS cannot access two files at once on the same drive (regardless of drive type). But if two files are located on two different drives, the OS can resulting in faster performance. This is exactly why many users and experts recommend locating temp file locations on a different drive.

Because HDD price per gig can be better, plus they can handle more write operations.

I keep my SSD for OS only and games on HDD.
 
Because HDD price per gig can be better
Totally irrelevant. Price per gig has nothing to do with stuttering!
plus they can handle more write operations.
Also irrelevant because again, that has nothing to do with stuttering.

And it is irrelevant anyway since current generation SSDs have a write limit that is so high (10s gigabytes per day, every day, for up to 10 years!!!!) only busy data centers need to worry about writes. And even if that limit is reached, the data can still be read. Not so with a HD.

I keep everything on SSDs.
 
Totally irrelevant. Price per gig has nothing to do with stuttering! Also irrelevant because again, that has nothing to do with stuttering.

And it is irrelevant anyway since current generation SSDs have a write limit that is so high (10s gigabytes per day, every day, for up to 10 years!!!!) only busy data centers need to worry about writes. And even if that limit is reached, the data can still be read. Not so with a HD.

I keep everything on SSDs.

Never had a problem with the raptor, in fact i got the raptor after the momentus XT was not able to be firmware tweaked as Seagate had no software to turn off the power saving function.
 
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I'd say OP's hdd is the cause of stuttering
 
I'd say OP's hdd is the cause of stuttering
Probably right but note that was 9 months ago the OP last replied. :rolleyes: So I think we should just let this thread die out again.
 
Sorry for reviving. But i saw something on the nvidia forum while searching this issue for myself. A guy says that if you put recording file directory to your HDD and temp file directory is on your SSD, you need to change your temp file location to your hdd as well to get less stuttering on the record.

might help to move the swap file to other drive, temp no. Or even better, if you have at least 16GB of RAM, turn the swap file off. Setting a custom fixed size like 32000 both min and max might also reduce swap file usage.
 
Cleaning up topic. Feel free to keep it up and earn points. Or ya'all can act like adults, follow our guidelines, be constructive and respectful to each other. Your choice. Feel free to test my patience.
 
There is rarely ever any good reason to disable the PF - regardless how much system RAM you have. Forcing Windows to jam everything into system RAM is not good memory management and definitely does not improve performance. But that is for a totally different discussion. So again, this thread needs to die out - and I will leave now in the hopes that will happen.
 
Might just be a bug in ShadowPlay that was ironed out with updated drivers.
 
Am
Probably right but note that was 9 months ago the OP last replied. :rolleyes: So I think we should just let this thread die out again.
Building a new system anyway, thanks.
 
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