Январь 2010 Февраль 2010 Март 2010 Апрель 2010 Май 2010
Июнь 2010
Июль 2010 Август 2010
Сентябрь 2010
Октябрь 2010
Ноябрь 2010
Декабрь 2010
Январь 2011
Февраль 2011 Март 2011 Апрель 2011 Май 2011 Июнь 2011 Июль 2011 Август 2011
Сентябрь 2011
Октябрь 2011 Ноябрь 2011 Декабрь 2011 Январь 2012 Февраль 2012 Март 2012 Апрель 2012 Май 2012 Июнь 2012 Июль 2012 Август 2012 Сентябрь 2012 Октябрь 2012 Ноябрь 2012 Декабрь 2012 Январь 2013 Февраль 2013 Март 2013 Апрель 2013 Май 2013 Июнь 2013 Июль 2013 Август 2013 Сентябрь 2013 Октябрь 2013 Ноябрь 2013 Декабрь 2013 Январь 2014 Февраль 2014
Март 2014
Апрель 2014 Май 2014 Июнь 2014 Июль 2014 Август 2014 Сентябрь 2014 Октябрь 2014 Ноябрь 2014 Декабрь 2014 Январь 2015 Февраль 2015 Март 2015 Апрель 2015 Май 2015 Июнь 2015 Июль 2015 Август 2015 Сентябрь 2015 Октябрь 2015 Ноябрь 2015 Декабрь 2015 Январь 2016 Февраль 2016 Март 2016 Апрель 2016 Май 2016 Июнь 2016 Июль 2016 Август 2016 Сентябрь 2016 Октябрь 2016 Ноябрь 2016 Декабрь 2016 Январь 2017 Февраль 2017 Март 2017 Апрель 2017 Май 2017
Июнь 2017
Июль 2017
Август 2017 Сентябрь 2017 Октябрь 2017 Ноябрь 2017 Декабрь 2017 Январь 2018 Февраль 2018 Март 2018 Апрель 2018 Май 2018 Июнь 2018 Июль 2018 Август 2018 Сентябрь 2018 Октябрь 2018 Ноябрь 2018 Декабрь 2018 Январь 2019
Февраль 2019
Март 2019 Апрель 2019 Май 2019 Июнь 2019 Июль 2019 Август 2019 Сентябрь 2019 Октябрь 2019 Ноябрь 2019 Декабрь 2019 Январь 2020
Февраль 2020
Март 2020 Апрель 2020 Май 2020 Июнь 2020 Июль 2020 Август 2020 Сентябрь 2020 Октябрь 2020 Ноябрь 2020 Декабрь 2020 Январь 2021 Февраль 2021 Март 2021 Апрель 2021 Май 2021 Июнь 2021 Июль 2021 Август 2021 Сентябрь 2021 Октябрь 2021 Ноябрь 2021 Декабрь 2021 Январь 2022 Февраль 2022 Март 2022 Апрель 2022 Май 2022 Июнь 2022 Июль 2022 Август 2022 Сентябрь 2022 Октябрь 2022 Ноябрь 2022 Декабрь 2022 Январь 2023 Февраль 2023 Март 2023 Апрель 2023 Май 2023 Июнь 2023 Июль 2023 Август 2023 Сентябрь 2023 Октябрь 2023 Ноябрь 2023 Декабрь 2023 Январь 2024 Февраль 2024 Март 2024 Апрель 2024 Май 2024 Июнь 2024 Июль 2024 Август 2024 Сентябрь 2024
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29
30
Game News |

Avermedia Live Gamer Mini capture card review

Capturing one's own gameplay has always been one of the biggest barriers when it comes to streaming and making content. It used to take a fair amount of money, equipment, and know-how to even have a fairly low quality recording set-up, and which likely only worked for one of your gaming devices. I remember paying hundreds of dollars for a solution that I still had to fight with to get working every time I turned it on. 

It's nice to see how far we've come exemplified with Avermedia's portable little capture card, the Live Gamer Mini (GC311).

As far as capture cards go, the Live Gamer Mini is somewhat lower spec than others on the market, but it has a profile and price point to match. It's not the card you buy if you want the highest resolution possible for game recording or passthrough, as it's limited to a max 1080p at 60 fps for both. But when you consider those are still the settings used by the vast majority of streamers and content creators, it's a card that's still likely worth a lookin' for many purposes. 

Only having 1080p 60 fps passthrough does mean you have to suck it up and play using visuals that might not be up to your usual standard. While I didn't detect any latency, I've been living the 4K, HDR, 120 fps life for a while now, so it did feel like a significant step down for some games. In the case of a twitchy first person shooter it could really affect your ability. 

Live Gamer Mini specs

(Image credit: Future)

Interface: USB 2.0 (USB Micro)
Video Input: HDMI
Audio Input: HDMI
Max Passthrough Resolution: 1080p 60
Max record resolution: 1080p 60
Record format: MPEG 4 (H.264+AAC) / supports hardware encoding
Dimensions: 100 x 57 x 18.8 mm (3.93 x 2.24 x 0.74-inches)
Weight: 74.5 g (2.63oz)
Price: $80 | £70 | $116 AUD

Avermedia's Live Gamer Mini isn't designed for that. Instead it's a highly portable and versatile device, a Jack of all as opposed to a master of one.

The box is only slightly larger than a credit card, and weighs only 75 grams—about the same as the lighter gaming mice available at the moment. It's also only about a finger deep, which outlines the fairly simple system with only three ports required for use: HDMI in, for whatever device is hosting what you want to capture; HDMI out, so you can have your passthrough on a screen; and Micro USB, heading to the computer to handle the capture and potential streaming. Somehow this thing can work just fine on USB 2.0, though the provided USB cable is a nice long braided Micro to A, which gives you heaps of space to to work with.

This set up allows it to work with all kinds of modern devices fairly seamlessly. I've tried it with Switch, PS5, Xbox One X, and PC outputting for capture to several different PCs of varying levels of beef, and it almost feels weird to say it has worked well with every single one. Sometimes there has been the odd setting to configure, like turning HDCP off on my PlayStation, or finding the competing pre-installed program that's trying to steal my source, but that would be standard no matter the capture device.

Image 1 of 2

(Image credit: Future)
Image 2 of 2

(Image credit: Future)

With the idea of a portable capture card in mind, I made sure to test it in different situations. On my laptop I made sure to only have OBS installed without any of Avermedia's own software—how I might use it if I brought this card to a streamer friend's house and planned on using their hardware—and it instantly recognised the input from the device plugged into the card on the first try. I'm not sure if I just have too much tech trauma around capture cards in my past but this actually made me tear up a little.

This card also has the option of using Avermedia's Stream Engine to essentially force the card to process video recording and keep your CPU free. It's not difficult to install and use, but it's also not easy and obvious. Once you've got it working, you can use it in programs like OBS by choosing the Stream Engine source. I tried it when my laptop was throttling due to being unplugged and I went from recording choppy video to something much smoother with no perceivable change to my CPU usage. 

Image 1 of 3

(Image credit: Future)
Image 2 of 3

(Image credit: Future)
Image 3 of 3

(Image credit: Future)
Do buy if...

✅ You want a reasonably priced and portable capture card that can work with everything HDMI: This little beastie is perfect for throwing in your pocket and bringing along with you so you can stream at friend's houses or on the go from your laptop. It's also really easy to simply move around a house for different setups as long as what you're connecting to offers HDMI.

Don't buy if...

❌ If you want 4K or high refresh rate passthrough: This is capped at 1080p at 60 fps for both passthrough and capture. If you need 120 fps to pull off the gaming content you want to record, or you're trying to show off UHD HDR visuals, you're fresh out of luck here.

You want to be future proof: Having only a USB 2.0 connection and lower specced HDMI ports doesn't really matter for streaming at the moment, but tech moves fast and these old protocols are going to be obsolete sooner rather than later.

Because the passthrough and the capture are both at the same visual fidelity it made it fairly easy to pick up on delay on the recording side of things, which was interesting to compare. With my Switch plugged in for example, it was fairly negligible. I could play Hades reasonably well just looking at the OBS window while I used it to stream to Twitch, which is fairly impressive. However, when I tried to play SpiderHeck on my PC the delay was much more visible. There's no way I could handle the 2D fast paced combat without using the passthrough monitor, and thankfully I've had no issues there using both PC monitors and TVs as tests.

The hardest part about recommending this card is that the NZXT Signal HD60 exists, and is our current pick for the best budget capture card. It offers much better passthrough, with support for 4K. On the flipside you don't get that Stream Engine for video recording, or the rest of the Avermedia Software.

The ease of use and versatility of the Live Gamer Mini is genuinely impressive, especially considering its size and price. I wouldn't recommend this card to someone who wanted it for their main PC to capture hours of high level Valorant play but that's just not who this card is for. Instead, this is a great choice for a variety streamer looking for a very portable card that should work with most modern devices at a modest price. Or perhaps a new content creator who wants to be able to try a bunch of ideas without breaking the bank.



Читайте также

The Sims 4's Grim Reaper event seems pretty neat actually but, surprising no one, it's also very bugged

Germany's world-first Warhammer academic conference is happening now with talks about 'authority and pluralism in the grim darkness of the far future' and 'Tyranid xenobiology'

New California law inspired by Ubisoft and Sony requires retailers to warn consumers that the digital games they buy can be taken away at any time




Game24.pro — паблик игровых новостей в календарном формате на основе технологичной новостной информационно-поисковой системы с элементами искусственного интеллекта, гео-отбора и возможностью мгновенной публикации авторского контента в режиме Free Public. Game24.pro — ваши Game News сегодня и сейчас в Вашем городе.

Опубликовать свою новость, реплику, комментарий, анонс и т.д. можно мгновенно — здесь.


Персональные новости

Подведены итоги конкурса «Мы верим твердо в героев спорта»

Подведены итоги конкурса «Мы верим твердо в героев спорта»

Терапевт Кондрахин посоветовал идти к врачу при наличии болей в грудной клетке

Подведены итоги конкурса «Мы верим твердо в героев спорта»