![]() ![]() The higher bitrate you stream at, the fewer people will be able to watch smoothly. Unless you are a Partner with guaranteed transcodes (quality options), running at a high bitrate will reduce the accessibility of your stream. Your viewers WILL receive more player Network Errors and have to reload the stream. 160 is as high as I'd bother going on audio. I've run down to 96kbps and no one noticed. 320 and 128 AAC (which OBS uses) is mostly un-noticeable unless you're listening side-by-side. The difference between 320kbps MP3 and 128kbps MP3 is significant. ![]() A partial will end up with the Source option being removed, as the ingest/replication/transfer stack failed, but the ingest was able to feed into the transcode stack to the point THAT feed can still be replicated and transferred to the local video delivery CDN servers. Your stream may stop being replicated if the ingest server is unable to process your incoming bitrate. I have successfully tested with up to 12mbps, but as you go higher, more people will receive Network Errors and player blackscreens. (Staff MAY come in and ask you to turn it down.) ![]() There is no technologically-enforced upper limit to how much bitrate you can use. I am one.Ĩ000kbps is simply a word-of-mouth, entirely unofficial "known good" value that mostly works. There is no higher bitrate limit for Partners.
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