How to Record and Edit Gameplay with HitPaw Screen Recorder
What you’ll need
- A Windows ⁄11 or macOS computer
- HitPaw Screen Recorder installed (free trial or licensed)
- Game or application to capture
- Optional: microphone and webcam for commentary
1. Configure basic settings
- Open HitPaw Screen Recorder.
- Mode: Choose “Game” mode for best performance when capturing fullscreen games; use “Screen” or “Region” if you need a portion of the display.
- Output folder: Set a folder with plenty of space.
- Video format & quality: Select MP4 (H.264) for wide compatibility. Choose quality between 60–100% depending on disk space.
- Frame rate: Set 60 FPS for smooth gameplay (30 FPS acceptable for calmer titles).
- Resolution: Match your game’s resolution (e.g., 1920×1080).
- Audio sources: Enable system audio and enable microphone if you’ll add live commentary. Set microphone volume and test levels.
2. Optimize performance
- Close unnecessary background apps (browsers, sync services).
- In-game, lower non-essential graphics settings if you experience frame drops while recording.
- Enable hardware acceleration (GPU encoding, e.g., NVENC or AMD VCE) in HitPaw to reduce CPU load if available.
3. Start recording
- Launch your game and return to HitPaw (or start HitPaw first and launch the game).
- Select the desired capture mode (Game/Region/Fullscreen).
- Enable webcam overlay and microphone if desired. Position webcam preview where it won’t block crucial HUD elements.
- Click the red Record button or use the hotkey to begin.
- Use Pause/Resume as needed for breaks.
- Click Stop when finished; the file saves to your output folder.
4. Import and trim in HitPaw’s editor
- Open HitPaw’s built-in editor (or Video Editor module).
- Import your recorded clip(s).
- Drag clips to the timeline.
- Trim: Cut out long idle sections or loading screens using split and delete.
- Cutting for pacing: Remove repeated mistakes or dead time; keep action and commentary engaging.
- Transitions: Add quick transitions only where scene changes need smoothing.
5. Add commentary, music, and overlays
- Voiceover: Record directly in the editor or import a pre-recorded track. Sync commentary to gameplay.
- Background music: Use royalty-free tracks; lower music volume under voice with fade-ins/outs.
- Annotations: Add text to explain tactics, callouts, or timestamps.
- Webcam: Resize and reposition the webcam clip; add a border or drop shadow for clarity.
- Game UI overlays: Add labels or icons to highlight items, abilities, or map locations.
6. Color, stabilization, and audio polishing
- Color correction: Slightly boost contrast and saturation if the game looks flat. Avoid extreme filters that obscure details.
- Stabilization: Rarely needed for screen capture; use only if you captured handheld footage.
- Audio leveling: Normalize system audio and voice levels; use noise reduction on mic tracks if background hiss is present.
- Equalization: Apply subtle EQ to make commentary clearer (reduce low-end rumble, slightly boost presence around 2–5 kHz).
7. Export settings for platforms
- YouTube (1080p60): MP4 (H.264), 1920×1080, 60 FPS, bitrate 12–20 Mbps.
- Twitch/Clips (1080p30): MP4, 30 FPS, bitrate 8–12 Mbps.
- Shorts/Reels (vertical): Crop to 9:16, 1080×1920, 30–60 FPS.
- In HitPaw, choose the matching preset or set custom bitrate/resolution to meet these targets. Enable “fast start” (web optimized) if uploading to the web.
8. Quick workflow tips
- Record longer raw footage and trim down—don’t over-edit live.
- Keep short backup clips for highlights.
- Use consistent naming and folders for game, date, and version.
- Maintain a template project in the editor with commonly used overlays and audio levels.
Troubleshooting common issues
- No audio recorded: confirm system audio capture and microphone permissions; check in-game audio output device.
- Choppy recording: lower FPS, enable GPU encoding, close background apps.
- Large file sizes: lower bitrate or record in a higher-compression codec; export shorter clips.
- Webcam lag: lower webcam resolution or use direct USB 3.0 port.
Example simple recording checklist
- Output folder set
- 60 FPS, 1080p, MP4 selected
- System audio + mic enabled and tested
- Hotkeys configured
- Webcam positioned and sized
- Background apps closed
Following these steps lets you capture smooth gameplay and produce polished videos with HitPaw Screen Recorder suitable for streaming platforms, YouTube, or highlights reels.
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