While the OP doesn’t mention 1080 or 4K and your video appears to be 1080, one way to prevent youtube from butchering your file is to encode it to 4K. If I was recording Overwatch or something like Tomb Raider then I would hands-down say 50+ FPS, but for a MMO such as LotRO where oftentimes there is still-screen movement on the game capture then 30 FPS is enough to easily capture all of your movement. Reasons why could include download bandwidth or just that having a 50+ FPS video running while also playing a game ( or often in my case watching Netflix) will cause one or both to start misbehaving despite having a powerful computer. Why? Because if some of your viewers are not able to watch the recorded video (or stream) at 50 or 60 FPS then in order to watch at 30 FPS they have to drop the video resolution down to 480p, which you mine-as-well not watch the video at that point. I could go into great detail of all the various settings I use for different recording or streaming scenarios if you want but the best advice that I can immediately give you for a MMO is to never record above 30 FPS. If all that you're doing is uploading ( not streaming) to YouTube then you can save a significant amount of hard drive space and upload time by recording in Variable Bitrate (VBR) instead of Constant Bitrate (CBR) that said if you are streaming then you ALWAYS use CBR. Twitch live encoder settings, bitrates and resolutions.YouTube live encoder settings, bitrates, and resolutions. YouTube recommended upload encoding settings.When it comes to recording or streaming videos I find the encoding settings are fairly universal across all applications.
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