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Streaming Setup Guides — OBS, Hardware, Capture, Audio

Hardware and broadcast software setup: OBS configuration, capture cards, microphones, webcams, chroma key, game capture, overlays, audio troubleshooting.

A working stream is an end-to-end pipeline: camera captures light, microphone captures sound, capture card captures console or PC video, OBS or Streamlabs composites everything, the encoder turns frames into bitrate, the uplink pushes bitrate to an ingest server, and Twitch's transcoder (or Kick's) pushes the output to viewers. Every weak link in that chain causes dropped frames, echo, black-screen game capture, audio desync, or ingest disconnects — the symptoms every streamer dreads mid-broadcast. This category is the setup-and-troubleshooting reference for the whole pipeline.

The guides start at the hardware decisions: how to choose a streaming microphone, a webcam, a capture card, a primary monitor, a secondary monitor, and the streaming software itself (OBS vs Streamlabs is the most common question on this side). Each guide focuses on the price-to-value tiers at 2026 hardware prices and what actually matters for a Twitch or Kick streamer — frame rate over color accuracy for most use cases, condenser vs dynamic for noise rejection, and chipset support for capture cards depending on whether you're streaming PC or console. Hardware guides here do not chase the most-expensive option; they identify the minimum viable rig for your budget plus the upgrades that give non-trivial returns.

The OBS section covers the configurations that break most often in real use: game capture showing a black screen (frequently a permission or GPU-driver issue, not OBS itself), echo in the audio mix (usually wrong monitoring routing), chroma key setup for green-screen backgrounds, webcam source configuration, and the latency-mode trade-off. The broadcast health reference explains what the numbers in OBS's network monitor mean — when "dropped frames" is the network's fault vs the encoder's fault vs the uplink's fault — which is the first thing to check when a stream degrades.

Platform-side setup — picking the right ingest server, enabling low-latency mode when it helps and when it doesn't, configuring stream keys safely, setting up local recording in parallel with streaming, restreaming to multiple platforms, and mobile or IRL broadcasting — is covered in its own sub-section. The stream key FAQ and the Twitch Inspector guide are the two most-referenced technical articles on the site; streamers return to them every time a new stream doesn't behave the way the previous one did.

Finally, the channel-page and panel-setup articles close the loop. A correctly configured OBS pushes good-looking bitrate; a correctly configured Twitch channel page turns a new viewer's first visit into a follow. Panels, about-me formatting, schedule, and brand-coherent graphics are covered alongside the recommended-software list and a short Nightbot configuration walkthrough for chat automation. This category is intentionally operational — every guide here exists because the answer is non-obvious and wrong defaults cost you stream time.

5 guides in this category

Как выбрать монитор для стрима

Как выбрать монитор для стрима

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Как выбрать второй монитор для стримов

Как выбрать второй монитор для стримов

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Карта захвата: для чего нужна, как работает

Карта захвата: для чего нужна, как работает

2 апреля 2026
Как настроить захват игры в OBS Studio

Как настроить захват игры в OBS Studio

2 апреля 2026
Как добавить хромакей в OBS Studio

Как добавить хромакей в OBS Studio

2 апреля 2026

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