
I'd like to take this opportunity to suggest the revival of this feature as it would prove quite useful to some of us. I'm obviously just trying to get the best of both worlds (which if I recall correctly, this was already possible on earlier OBS versions where you could manually choose the D3D11 adapter on the settings). Due to this problem I'm obligated to either have the encoding performance of quicksync but slow rendering (as it is much weaker than the dGPU) and game capturing (since I have to use the slow multi GPU compability option) or, the CPU toll of x264 and the giant uplift on rendering and game capturing performance of my dGPU. When I open OBS with my iGPU (which is the default), the logs show that both the iGPU and the dedicated GPU are properly recognized but OBS ends up choosing the intel one to do the rendering work (as you can see in the logs). Step 3: Click on Advanced Settings and go to the Troubleshooting tab. Step 2: Click on Display and then on Change Display Settings. Follow these steps to turn it off: Step 1: Go to Settings >Control Panel on your computer. It happears that I'm not alone with this problem, (see the 22.0.2 part). This should solve the rendering problem in Sony Vegas.
#Sony vegas 13 doesnt see quicksync full
Some computers can’t handle Full HD(1080p), and some can’t handle QHD. It happens that when I do that, OBS doesn't recognize the intel iGPU but the dedicated nvidia one only (It is also recognized "twice" so, the logs end up showing that I have 2 identic nvidia cards). If Sony Vegas is crashing on your system then you need to see the video quality in which you trying to render your videos. So, I've been having this issue which disables me from using intel's quicksync (it doesn't appear on the encoder dropdown list) on my laptop whenever I use my dedicated GPU to open OBS.
