*** Street Fighter IV League (Season 2) ***

Table all done :)

Also made listings of who's played who, so if anyone gets stuck and forgets who they've played, who they need to play or simply wants to know what a particular score was just gis a shout.

Nice work mate, thanks again. :cool:
 
I know this has come up before, but i wanted to post something that shows whats needed from start to finish.


Artheas' guide to recording and uploading fights!

This is basically a guide to what i do.

First you'll need to download
1 - FRAPS
2 - VirtualDub (no install required)
3 - FFDShow MPEG-4 (possibly don't need, as it's a decoder, i'm not sure if there's an encoder that comes with it)
4 - LAME ACM MP3 Codec

Install 1, 3 and 4 (right click the .inf, choose install).


Run FRAPS, and configure the settings. Here's what i use:

FRAPS1.gif

FRAPS2.gif

FRAPS3.gif

FRAPS4.gif


It's important that 60fps is checked, otherwise you'll have angry opponents during recording.


Start up SF4 and do a test recording. Check that the FPS counter stays at 60 (58+). If the frame rate drops during recording, lower the graphical effects/resolution until there are no frame drops.

My PC is about 4 years old now, and my frame rates are fine during recording, running at 1024x768, all eye candy off.

When recording during an actual match, make sure that when you press the button (F12 in my case) to start recording, the HDD LED on your PC case suddenly becomes constantly lit, showing that FRAPS is writing the file to your hard disk drive.

After you've kicked some ass, press the button again to stop recording.
Some people prefer to record from beginning of first fight to the end of the second, i prefer to separate them. One continuous fight is better though in that you won't forget to press record for the second fight!

Now you should have at least 2 new files in your FRAPS video folder.


Open up VirtualDub.
Go to File->Open Video File
Choose the file containing the start of the fight.

VD2.gif


Use the seek bar (1) to make sure you have the file you want.
Now it's quite likely that your video is split into several parts by FRAPS, so attach the following part to your currently open video by going to File -> Append AVI segment. Whatever file you choose will be added to the end of the open file.
If you want to trim off parts of the video, use the buttons at (2) to move frame by frame, or use the seek bar. The first button at (3) is a start marker, the second is an end marker. Use the start marker at the start of the part you wish to cut, and the end marker at the end of the part you want to cut. Press ctrl+x to remove it from your video.


Unless you want your video to remain several Gb in size, you'll need to configure your compression options before you save.

In the menu bar, go to Video, and make sure Full processing mode is selected. Then click Compression, and a window should pop up. Choose ffdshow, and press Configure to the right.
VD3.gif

Here are the top, you can select which encoder you want to use. I just stick with the default MPEG-4 - XVID. More important though is the bitrate option.
The default of 900kbps produces crap quality videos, and higher = better. 4096 kbps typically produces a 90MB file for a short fight, and a 150MB file for a long fight.
I'd say don't go lower than 3000kbps, and go as high as you want, as long as you have the line speed/patience to upload the file. Type the bitrate you want into the box.
Click OK, OK.


Now for the audio. In the menu bar, go to Audio, and select Full processing mode. Now select Compression under Audio.
VD4.gif

Choose the Lame MP3 encoder, and select the bitrate you want to encode at. 44100Hz, 128/192 kbps, stereo is typical mp3 quality. CD quality is 320kbps.
Click OK.


Almost done with VirtualDub!
Go to File->Save as avi, and enter the filename you wish to save as.
While saving, a box will pop up showing the compression/saving progress. Make sure that the predicted filesize is what you'd expect, otherwise it means the compression options havent been set correctly.


Once that's done, go to youtube or other video site, upload the file, post a link here to the video, and you're done!



(i was about the abandon this post halfway through since it seemed kinda crappy, but i thought i might as well finish the rest since i'd done half of it already. i hope it helps someone :p)
 
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Absolutely spot on. I did ask for something earlier and this is exactly what I wanted. Cheers Artheas. Now I can record me beating you :D (j/k ;))
 
Nice guide, thanks mate :) Problem I have is that I don't stay near 60 FPS steady during the recording - drops to aruond 38 - 46 FPS with near enough the computer listed in my signature. Think it's due to all the eye candy being on or Vista just being rubbish?
 
Nice guide, thanks mate :) Problem I have is that I don't stay near 60 FPS steady during the recording - drops to aruond 38 - 46 FPS with near enough the computer listed in my signature. Think it's due to all the eye candy being on or Vista just being rubbish?

What resolution do you run SF4 at?

I just did a quick test at 1280x1024, everything maxed, recording at full size.
My frame rate didn't go below 55 fps during normal gameplay. Although it still seemed choppy.
Are you running at very high resolution?
Are you recording to C drive, or another?
Are you running antivirus?

If it's no, no, no, then it could be vista i guess, but i'd imagine others run it fine with vista. Newer versions of FRAPS have some fixes for vista.

My PC specs are far inferior to yours so it won't purely be the eye candy fault.
 
Ah ok np then :)

Yeah as Artheas said. Make sure your recording on a different drive to windows/and or game drive. Make sure the hdd is as fast as you can get it, i.e delete some rubbish if you have any as this when after a defrag as well will help the speed of the drive i think.

I have anti virus on but that doesn't seem to effect me, nod32 is the one i use.

But i once had really crap fps when recording and that was on my old drive once i got a new drive a nice fast samy 1tb and changed fraps to that drive to record to my fps has been 60fps solid when recording WITHOUT lowering the res like i used to have to do. So imo the hdd is thee most important aspect of game recording.
 
I've been recording to C drive, maybe that's why performance took such a big hit. I've changed to another drive now so thanks guys, will test it out tomorrow. :)
 
I was recording to the D drive (kinda like a storage drive) for movies, but I've turned some of the eye candy off and it seems to be back on 60 FPS whilst recording although chops slightly when it switches to a new file (seems to hit 3.9GB of a raw movie file and starts a new one) but only for a second or two - just hoping that isn't the second or two when I'm trying to block an ultra :P

Cheers guys, least it's at 60 FPS though which is good (offline at least, need to test online).
 
Me vs hahdooken

3- 0

hahdooken vs me

0 - 3

Recorded but first match messed up recording cos i alt and tabed before we got to the match. :(
 

Me vs Artheas

Me 1 him 3
Him 3 me 0

GG

Skip to about 1 min in as i messed up stickin this vid together and i couldnt be bothered to edit it and redo it all. :p
 
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