When you are live streaming through OBS Studio, encoding the video takes a lot of CPU resources. If you do not have a high-end computer, you are likely to face Encoding Overloaded issue while using OBS Studio. High encoding problem is rather common in OBS Studio because video recording and streaming demand high system resources which your computer is unable to meet.
In layman’s terms, encoding overloading means your hardware is just not running as fast as required to process the video you are streaming or recording. Since you cannot change your hardware configuration overnight, here are the different ways you can fix OBS high encoding when streaming.
The higher the resolution of the video recording or streaming, the greater will be the CPU usage. This is because your processor has to process more number of pixels per frame. That is why you have to lower the output resolution of your video. Even when your base resolution is high, you have to cut down the output resolution. Base resolution is the resolution of the video at source which could be the game you are playing. The output resolution is the resolution of the video you are getting after recording or you are streaming in real-time. Here are the steps to follow.
Step 1: Open OBS and go to Settings.
Step 2: Select Video tab. You will have to look for Output (Scaled) Resolution option.
Step 3: You have to reduce the resolution from the current resolution. If it is at 1920 x 1080p, you have to bring it down to 1280 x 720p.
Step 4: Click on Apply and Ok buttons. Restart your computer and start streaming or recording again.
Way 2. Lower Your Frame Rate
The frame rate of a video determines the number of frames captured per second. The higher the frame rate, the greater will be the pressure on GPU to render more number of frames per second. Unless you have a powerful configuration, you will come across OBS high encoding when streaming if the frame rate is high such as 60FPS. Here are the steps to lower the frame rate of your video on OBS.
Step 1: Launch OBS and go to Settings.
Step 2: Go to Video tab and look for Common FPS Values option.
Step 3: If it is set to 60, you have to bring it down to 30. Basically, you have to reduce the current value.
Step 4: Click on Apply and Ok button to save the new setting. Restart your computer and resume your OBS operation.