![]() ![]() In rare circumstances you can actually have completely mixed up and wrong colors. If you have these settings set incorrectly, or your capture device settings don’t match the source, then you can wind up with issues. The setting for your game console is usually under TV and Display Options. Leave the Advanced tab of OBS on Partial, however. (PC monitors can use Full/PC RGB mode.) I recommend leaving this on Limited, but if you change it to Full/PC RGB then you also need to specify Full in your Video Capture Device properties. Game consoles have a HDMI color range setting, but default to Limited/Standard/Partial, as that’s required for TV usage. For most people, this should be left on Default or Partial – but if you’re manually specifying Partial, it should match your actual source’s settings. This setting will also appear in the Video Capture Device properties for your given capture device – be it a webcam or a capture card. There are some exceptions where Full is okay for recording (which we’ll mention later) but for streaming and most general uses, this should be left on Partial. In OBS, the setting appears in the Advanced tab of settings, where (in my opinion) it should always be left on Partial. The color range setting appears in two important places in OBS itself, and potentially one place for your video source. PC monitors, however, typically operate in the Full range of 0-255. H264 is generally optimized for this Limited/Partial mode. This means that any information above 235 is seen as white and any below 16 is seen as black. Typically TVs and videos formatted for TV only use the Limited (or Partial, or “Legal”) range of 16-235. This refers to the maximum and minimum luminance values (or white/black levels) in a video signal. Use coupon code “epos50off” to save 50% on this package if you’re one of the first 20 buyers, or use coupon code “eposvox” to save 15%. This post is sponsored by Nerd or Die and their new Overdrive stream package. ![]() ![]() If you’ve had overly-punchy and dark video captures, unsaturated or washed out captures, or just generally want to know what this setting is – this post is for you. This is one of those things that you may have frustrations with even if you don’t know what I’m talking about. A subject of understandable confusion when it comes to streaming and content creation – especially with game consoles – is RGB Color Range settings. ![]()
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