Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Guides”
Ballistic Bread Baking with BallisticToaster!
[Editor’s Note: The following is an excerpt from a text conversation I had with a friend in December 2020 that I decided to spin out into its own post about how I make my own bread. The recipe itself is pulled from various recipes and YouTube videos online, especially from Binging With Babish. Some things have been added, many grammatical mistakes were corrected, and a few sentences have been changed to make it flow better. If you want a bullet-point version of how to make this recipe, look no further than right below this blurb and you’ll find it! God knows no one wants to read War and Peace before they get to the important part of a recipe but if you’d like to witness the chaos that’s about to unfold anyway, look below the bullet points and buckle up. Eid Mubarak, y’all! ~BallisticToaster]
Toasty's OBS Setup: Overlays, Chatbots, Moderation, and General Guidelines
On the final part of Toasty’s OBS Setup, we’re going to be going through the tools you need to build a welcoming environment in your stream from overlays to chatbots and a general code of conduct to abide by when you’re on the air so you can help set the tone for your stream that’ll help support the community that you’re helping to build every minute you’re live.
Overlays
Overlays refer to the various on-screen elements that display information about your stream in real-time such as alerts, sound alert redemptions, follower goals, and messages from stream chat. Some of these overlays can also be bundled with free and premium themes that are hosted on services such as Streamlabs and StreamElements. These platforms also offer tools to help you build and customize your overlays that you can then add to your scenes in OBS Studio using Browser Sources which pull information from a user-specified URL and can be placed anywhere on your scenes like any other source. Fine-grained customization of overlays themselves requires some working knowledge of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to make changes without breaking the overlays, though often you’ll find yourself writing more CSS code than anything else.
Toasty’s OBS Setup: Touch Portal & Meme Scenes
In the first OBS setup post I published, I made mention of external stream control tools such as the Elgato Stream Deck and how they can greatly streamline and automate aspects of streaming especially if you only have one monitor. Today we’re going to be focusing on one such example that makes streaming much more convenient, only relies on a tablet or smartphone, and enables moments such as this.
Meme Scenes
If you’ll recall part one, we touched on two different types of scenes: Static and Dynamic scenes. Static scenes require no streamer interaction while dynamic scenes require them. Today we’ll be introducing a third type of scene: Meme Scenes. Meme scenes are the name given to scenes such as the example seen above and are typically used to reference or make light of the current situation in response to a certain context. As such, Meme scenes can be seen as something of a happy medium between both dynamic and static scenes that if used properly can make your viewers that much happier for their inclusion and usage.
Toasty’s OBS Setup: Audio Mixing
Audio mixing is one of the most challenging aspects of streaming to manage and it’s where your setup will diverge wildly from another person’s while also being subject to the most adjustments and tweaks over time. Everyone’s audio environment is highly variable based on a number of different factors and everything from the quality of your microphone to how loud your voice is, to the volume of other audio sources are relative to each other, the acoustics of the room you’re in (including any soundproofing), background noise, and even your own hearing level to name a few possible factors can have beneficial or detrimental effects on how your stream sounds to your viewers. Proper audio mixing can ensure greater auditory clarity for viewers and is tremendously helpful for those who are hard of hearing, leading to an overall better experience that’ll keep your viewers coming back to you.
Toasty's OBS Setup: Recommended Hardware & Scene/Source Layout
Introduction
A week ago, I ran a stream talking about my streaming setup going over everything from audio mixing to my scene layouts as a way to help a couple people out who asked how I set things up on OBS and as a way to say “thank you” and give back to the community that helped me become a Twitch affiliate. To all members of the Crumb Club new and old, there’s no way I could’ve done this without you and the community you all helped build. Thank you all so much for tuning in, following, chatting, lurking, and spreading word of our doughy deeds, the best is yet to crumb and I can’t wheat for you all to see what’s in store for the future of the channel!