**A Step-by-Step Guide to Setting Up a Game Capture in OBS**
Hey everyone, welcome back to my channel! Today, I'll be showing you how to set up a game capture in OBS, perfect for filling some time or having a heart-to-heart with your chat. I've just launched Minecraft and now that we're all tapped out of it in OBS, let's go to the endgame scene.
To do this, click on the plus icon, then choose Game Capture right here. Click on OK and then change the mode to Capture Specific Window. Add my game here in the window dropdown – right here! This is my game. Just click on OK, and you might not see that in the beginning because you need to open your game first.
Now, the game capture will be hooked. So, now you can all tap out of it, and there we go! This is the last frame before I closed it. And again, now you can go to the intermission scene and just like with the webcam, we can now add a second Game Capture here.
To do this, select Add Existing, choose the game capture we just added in another scene, and again, it will need to hook if you add a new game capture. You need to launch your game one time before you can actually see it in OBS. Now, we can make it smaller, then move it below the overlay.
**Adding Transitions in OBS**
Now that we have a bunch of scenes here on the left, it's about time to add our transition! Here at the bottom, you see Scene Transition and if you click on the dropdown, then you have your Cut and Fade. You can change it to cut and then when you change them on the left, you simply immediately cut to them.
But you can also click here on Add Stinger. You just click on OK, then click on Browse, then in your Graphics Pack, go to the Stinger Transition folder. Here, you've got a transition without sound and then one with sound. I'm gonna choose the one without sound.
Now, you've gotta set the transition point! To find the transition point, you need to know how long your transition is. So, I'm gonna go to the Animated Transition folder here right-click it, go to Properties, go to Details on the top right, and it says it's one second.
I think this could be one and a half, etc., but it's a quick transition! As my transition point, I'm gonna choose half of the duration, which is in milliseconds. So, I'm gonna select 500, which is half a second then click on OK.
Make sure that here your Stinger that we just made is selected, and then when you change your scene, as you see, this is the transition! What's happening now is pretty simple: when you click on a transition, OBS will wait 500 milliseconds before actually making the cut to the next scene.
Since the overlay transition here is being displayed, you don't see OBS cutting to the next scene. The animation fills the screen, then it cuts, and then you see the next scene!
**Adding Alerts, Labels, and Your Chat**
Now that we've made some progress, it's time to add alerts on the screen! We also need to make sure that your chat appears right here and add labels on the screen for recent followers, recent donations, top donation, etc.
Explaining all those things would make this video way too long. So, I'm gonna add a few links in the description for alerts, labels, your chat, all that stuff!
**Sponsored by Owned**
Since this video was sponsored by Owned! If you want to buy one of their packages – which are all high-quality, fully animated Michael TV, and gives you 50% of the price!
You can check out their website and give them a try. If you enjoyed this video, then please give it a like, subscribe to the channel for more content, and I hope to see you in one of my next videos!
Have a nice day!