Release notes
Videorc 0.9.16 Beta 1
Coming from OBS? Import your scenes and settings in one honest step. Twitch accounts connect natively now, a live "watching" counter joins your comments, and recording while livestreaming produces the smooth file it always should have.
Import your OBS setup, connect Twitch, and record while you stream
- Import your OBS setup — scenes, devices, resolution, recording folder, and stream settings — with an honest report of what maps and what doesn't, before anything changes.
- Connect your Twitch account natively — stream setup, chat, and stream keys without leaving Videorc.
- See how many people are watching, live, right in the Comments window — YouTube and Twitch counts combined.
- Recording while livestreaming is fixed — local recordings are smooth at full frame rate with audio in sync, on the stream and in the file.
- If recording quality ever degrades mid-stream, Videorc warns you while there's still time to act.
Coming from OBS? Bring your setup
Settings → Import from OBS reads your OBS scene collection and profile and shows you a truthful three-part report — what imports, what gets approximated, and what Videorc doesn't do — before anything is applied. One click brings over your cameras, microphones, window captures, output resolution and frame rate, recording folder, background image, and stream settings. Fresh installs with OBS on the machine get a gentle pointer.
Twitch, natively
Connect Twitch from the Livestream tab: authorize in your browser and you're in — stream metadata, chat, and stream-key handling all work without pasting keys around.
Who's watching
While you're live, the Comments window shows a live "watching" count — YouTube and Twitch combined, with the split on hover. The numbers are also saved with each session, so richer stats can build on them.
Record + stream, finally right
Recording locally while livestreaming used to produce choppy, slideshow-like local files with drifting audio — the recording pipeline timestamped frames at the wrong moment when both outputs ran at once. The timing now comes straight from the encoder on every output: local recordings are smooth at full frame rate, audio stays in sync on both the stream and the file, and a streaming platform that refuses the connection can no longer take your local recording down with it.
Fixes
- A quality warning appears mid-session if the recording leg falls behind — no more discovering a broken file after the stream ends.
- Stream destinations that fail mid-stream are reported per platform while the others keep going.
