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Please read the question again: "after i finish recording i play the video file on VLC and it looks great, just like my gameplay, but when I upload it to YouTube, it looks awful, blurry and so much noise in it" – so it's not about the game not running at 60fps– slhckCommented Feb 11, 2019 at 14:37
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It's because your recording software is not compressing much your video, then it's not visible. But YouTube as an online streaming platform, have to compress much more and the problem appear. I got the same problem before, my recording was 50Mbps (nearly no compression) and YouTube no more than 10Mbps.– redhenessCommented Feb 11, 2019 at 14:41
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Hi, I tried recording at lower FPS and the result wasn't so good, but about the second option i think i can do that but need more info. so i have Adobe premiere pro, it has options for time interpolation and they are (frame sampling by default, frame blending and optical flow), AFAIK optical flow is used when video file has lower FPS than the target FPS we set at export, so i think i should use this one, but , will it actually help? because the video file the OBS gives me is already 60 FPS with 100mbps bitrate, so if i convert it to 50mbps 60FPS x264 MP4 in premiere, the end result will...– hotcakexCommented Feb 11, 2019 at 14:48
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will look better on Youtube? (with optical flow of course)– hotcakexCommented Feb 11, 2019 at 14:48
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I think the answer is now in the hand of video processing specialists (dsp.stackexchange.com or video.stackexchange.com) i don't think you will find an how to for premiere here. The point is to detect when you have two identical frames and replace it by an interpolated one. But i'm pretty sure that's will help YouTube to compress the video in a better way (avoiding representing still frames).– redhenessCommented Feb 11, 2019 at 14:53
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