

While testing, the power usage of Twitch Studio was always either high or very high in Task Manager. Twitch Studio drains more battery compared to OBS. With the help of the Task Manager, this test checks the power usage of both tools while recording. Winner: Twitch Studio Power usage test Twitch Studio and OBS Battery Usage Test Video The file recorded in Twitch Studio consumed 13.1 MB on the default settings, whereas the video recorded in OBS took 22.3 MB of storage. On the contrary, OBS saves files in the MKV file, but you can change the format to MP4, FLV, and MOV. Twitch Studio saves videos in the FLV format, but an option to save in MP4 is available.

We record gameplay for about one minute and check the file size of the saved video file.

In contrast, the CPU usage moved to 65% while opening OBS Studio.īoth did not have a significant impact on the performance while recording the video. The software with less effect wins the round.ĭuring the start-up of Twitch Studio, the performance scale climbed from 55% to 80% (an increase of 30%). We check the computer’s performance score while opening and recording both tools in the performance test. OBS will cover tests to see which is gentle on resources. Options such as constant framing, multiple audio sources management, more file format support, etc., are possible. More advanced settings: OBS has a ton of other options that can help you get the most out of streaming. Tutorials, gaming, discussions, and other project types can be scenes. Sources and scenes: You can create scenes and add sources to separate types of work. Plugins: It comes with over 100 plugins to extend its functionalities. Minimal performance impact: From the tests, OBS won both performance and battery usage tests. Platform chat: Like Twitch Studio, OBS displays a Twitch chat overlay to reply to messages. Multiple platforms support: Unlike Twitch Studio, OBS supports various platforms.
