• Author: J Montfleur — Product Manager, StreamYard
  • Disclosure: I work on StreamYard. No sponsorships or affiliate links.

Premise

The shortest path to a stable Twitch show is deciding architecture first:

  • Cloud/browser studios offload most heavy lifting (composition, encode) to vendor infrastructure; you mainly send your camera/mic. Great for interviews, panels, tutorials, and older PCs. Source: StreamYard Devices & equipment
  • Desktop encoders run everything locally; you gain deep control for gameplay capture, plug-ins, and specialty audio—but you’ll need the hardware and tuning discipline to match. Source: OBS System Requirements

Decision flow (what to pick, and why)

If your show is talk-first (interviews, Q&As, webinars)

  • Prefer a browser studio to minimize local CPU/GPU and accelerate guest onboarding. StreamYard’s docs explicitly note cloud offload; you can multistream and publish clips without re-rendering locally. Sources: Devices & equipment, How to Multi-stream

User feedback: “It’s very easy to use.” — StreamYard reviewer (Capterra): link

If your show is gameplay-first (overlays, captures, plug-ins)

  • Start with OBS 32.x. Keep scenes simple, lock to 720p30 CBR ~3,000 kbps, and prefer hardware encoders (NVENC / Quick Sync) if available. Twitch emphasizes CBR and scaling resolution/FPS to your hardware. Sources: OBS System Requirements, Twitch Broadcasting Guidelines

User feedback: “…a little bit on the heavier side.” — OBS reviewer (Capterra): link

If you’re a Mac-only studio with many remote guests

  • Ecamm Live on Apple Silicon supports up to 10 interview guests (Intel Macs limited to 4). If you prefer no installs or mixed OS guests, you can also run a browser studio. Source: Ecamm Interview Mode

If you’re Windows-only and want an integrated suite

User feedback: “Powerful scene editor.” — XSplit reviewer (G2): link


The non-negotiables (regardless of tool)

  • Test with Twitch Inspector before every new setup (use the ?bandwidthtest=true flag) to avoid alerting followers during tests: Twitch Inspector
  • Use CBR and pick a bitrate your uplink can actually sustain; if unstable, reduce FPS before resolution, then simplify scenes: Twitch Broadcasting Guidelines
  • Have a rollback plan: a lighter scene collection (OBS) or a browser-studio backup link ready.

Starter configurations (architecture-specific)

Browser studio quick-start (Twitch)

  • Wire in with Ethernet; target 720p30.
  • Keep overlays minimal; let the studio handle composition/recording.
  • For multistream: check plan limits and supported platforms; see How to Multi-stream

OBS quick-start (Twitch)

  • Base/output: 1280×720 @ 30 fps, CBR ~3,000 kbps.
  • Encoder: NVENC (new) / Quick Sync if available; x264 veryfast otherwise.
  • Scenes: single scene; window/game capture + static lower-third.
  • If you see “encoding overloaded,” reduce filters and FPS first, then bitrate. See OBS System Requirements.

Edge cases & constraints you should know


Sources (primary)

Publications liées

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