I use the Elgato HD60 S Capture Card 1080p to send the output of my main monitor (which is plugged in to my MacBook Pro) to the streaming PC. This scene contains all of my essentials, the p4nth3rlabs alerts, and two source component scenes. This is the scene I’ll show for most of a stream. I leave both components in the scene for ease of switching - I do this type of thing in a lot of scenes. This is also the case for the p4nth3rball, which is another self-contained application.ĭepending on my mood, I’ll use the black or red patterned backgrounds. Even though I want to show the alerts on every scene, the browser source remains separate from the essentials due to it needing to be positioned differently across scenes. The p4nth3rlabs alerts browser source is added as a separate component on each composite scene. The Geo Loop is the dynamic geometric transparent-ish background - this is something I tried out once and it stuck - and I haven’t needed to put it in its own component scene yet. The starting-soon and majick are at the centre of the screen. The panther static overlay is a component scene containing the two large semi-transparent panthers you see in the background of the scene. The giveaway, footer and chat overlays are powered by a React app, whilst p4nth3rdrop - the emote rain powered by Twitch chat commands - is a self-contained application. I also separate the list of component scenes into categories with blank scenes named “-”. I prefix all scene names with labels for quick visual identification, such as for a composite scene that will be shown on stream, for component and so on. I organise my scene collection in OBS into a set of component scenes to enable easy reuse across composite scenes. I use a variety of configurable UI docks available in OBS, including:Ĭaptions monitor (powered by the Google Cloud Captions plugin) This ensures I can time raids at the end of my stream accurately, and alerts me to any visual/framerate issues as well. The most important part of what I monitor in Twitch Stream Manager is what my viewers are seeing (which is always slightly delayed compared to what I see in OBS). Monitoring activity on two screens means I am less likely to miss activity in chat or items in the request queue. I monitor my stream through a combination of UI docks in OBS and the Twitch Stream Manager - which I view on my MacBook Pro screen.
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