

Now that the VAC is your default output device in Windows, you need to patch this audio also to your headsphones or speakers in order to hear the audio as well. Set the default output (playback) device to a VAC in the Windows Sound settings. In the Windows Sound settings, select a VAC as the default output (playback) device. Open up the Windows Sound settings, either by searching “Sound Settings” or right-clicking the -icon in the system tray and selecting Open Sound Settings. You will need to set the default output (playback) device in Windows to one of the installed VAC and by doing so you will not hear anything that is playing on your computer, this will be restored in the next step. After installation, make sure you have restarted your computer before proceeding as this is required. If you have not done so yet, please download the first VAC for free from VB-Audio.

Start this set up by having a VAC installed. For example, you are connected with a VOIP application so you can hear your moderators and/or friends but do not want to have them heard on stream. It can be solved in SLOBS with a streamdeck-launchable autohotkey "remove title" script toggle.This guide will walk you through a simple audio set up utilizing only a single virtual audio cable (abbreviated VAC) so you can hear more than the stream will hear. I have a streamdeck action for a variety of window sizes for different use cases, but you can drag your window around manually to get it to work as well.įinal note: if you're using Streamlabs OBS you will have a title bar on the windowed projector that shows in the discord output. Important: This window needs to be of an appropriate size to stream so that people can see it. this window can be streamed into Discord directly, giving you full OBS control of the output into Discord. This will pop out a projector in a new window. You can right-click on the scene preview and click the windowed projector option. If you have OBS installed and scenes set up, then all you have to do is pop out a windowed projector for the output (note that it is also possible to do projectors per scene but in this case we want the full output that would normally stream to twitch). Here's what the technique looks like from the viewer-side (modeled by my friend Dom). There is a way to do that though, ask me on twitter if you want me to write that post). (One drawback: sound will not pass through with this technique. This gives me access to all of my OBS scenes, layouts, and chat interactions inside of Discord.

I moved my streams to the Party Corgi Network Discord from Twitch and as a result I stream OBS output into Discord.
