Featured

AVerMedia GC573 Live Gamer 4K HDR Capture Card Review

A Closer Look and Performance


The capture card its self is pretty fantastic looking. For those who build their systems to look as good as they perform, this is a good thing. Obviously, it’s a PCIe device, so be sure you have a spare PCIe lane for it. If you’re running a mini-ITX system and also want a GPU, it’s a no-go. However, keep in mind, AVerMedia makes external capture devices for such scenarios. Of course, those external ones are handy for laptop users too.

The chassis of the card is made from metal, giving it fantastic strength and passive heat dissipation. There’s loads of ventilation on it too, and no fans means no noise.

Down the side, a simple AVerMedia logo, and of course, it’s RGB; hell yeah!

Finally, on the rear of the card, a pair of HDMI ports. One is input, the other output. This means you can connect something like a PS4 to input, and then output back to your TV while having the PC do the capture. It’s pretty straight forward, so let’s plug it in and have a tinker!

Setup & Performance

Getting up and running really couldn’t be much easier. For the beginners out there, it’s as simple as putting it in a PCIe slot, and installing the software/drivers from the AVerMedia website. It runs through all the usual updates, and it’s pretty much sorted within a few minutes.

Xbox One

Of course, you’ll need to run a HDMI cable from the device you want to capture, to the capture card. We tested the Xbox One first and were greeted with an HDCP issue almost immediately. It turns out that’s because I had used NetFlix or some other protected app. This is fixed by holding down the power button on the Xbox, reboot, and you’re good to go. If you load Netflix or similar, then you’ll need to reboot again to clear it. However, for gaming, you shouldn’t have such issues.

Obviously, this isn’t the Xbox One X, so recording at 4K is pretty pointless here. You can choose the codec you would like to use, such as HVEC or the Nvidia one, since I have an Nvidia GPU which can offload that process. For most users, leaving things at default, or using the built-in recording quality profiles will be more than enough. For pros, you likely already know more about what you see here than I need to tell you.

Refresh Rates

Depending on your source, select the maximum frame rate of your hardware. For the Xbox One, that’ll be 1080p and 60 FPS. If you’re gaming on a high refresh rate display and would like to capture that, you can go up to 240 FPS at 1080p. However, 4K is limited to 60 FPS. Again, it’s all pretty straight forward stuff.

Audio

The audio is recorded as it is sent from the HDMI, and will allow surround sound recording. However, you can also change the bitrate should you need to. Honestly, I see no reason to drop this below the default of 256 unless file sizes are of absolute importance to you. Or perhaps you have no intention of using the original audio at all.

Mixing it Up

Some advanced features are on offer, allowing you to mix audio sources, which can be handy if recording desktop footage, using headsets, and other media players. Or you can focus the recording to only record the capture its self. Fortunately, you can add delays here too, ensuring everything is perfectly synced. We had no issues and chose to leave all at the default settings.

Social

If you sign into your social media accounts within the app, you can access the share library directly and upload from there. Of course, if you want more freedom, the files are saved to your designated folder (c:/users/username/AVermedia/ by default). There you can do whatever you want just like any other file on your system.

Lag?

Not any that I can see, it was immediate and perfectly clear. You can full screen the stream window, hiding the toolbars too. Honestly, I was quite happy playing my Xbox on the PC monitor right through the capture card. Zero issues, no quality drop, it just works perfectly well.

Screenshot and Video

A nice and simple too is that you don’t just have to rely on the video capture. It can capture high high-resolution screenshots of your games too. Of course, these are scaled down to 800px wide fit our site, but you get the idea. You can do this on its own, or while capturing video. Below are some demo files I recorded with Soul Calibur VI on PC at 4K max graphics, Halo 3 in Halo MMC on Xbox One and Sunset Overdrive on Xbox One. All three short clips were recorded at 60 FPS, with the settings otherwise seen in the screenshots above. This is a “look at my gaming skills” demo, just a simple plug, play, record, upload demonstration captured using the included software.

Soul Calibur VI PC 4K 60 FPS

Halo MMC – Halo 3 Xbox One 1080p 60FPS

Sunset Overdrive Xbox One 1080p 60FPS

Page: 1 2 3

Peter Donnell

As a child still in my 30's (but not for long), I spend my day combining my love of music and movies with a life-long passion for gaming, from arcade classics and retro consoles to the latest high-end PC and console games. So it's no wonder I write about tech and test the latest hardware while I enjoy my hobbies!

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Seasonic Focus GX 850W Fully Modular 80+ Gold PCIE 5.0 Power Supply/PSU ATX3.0

Following the well-established legacy of the Seasonic FOCUS Series, the FOCUS GX Series was upgraded…

2 hours ago

Thermaltake The Tower 200 Matcha Green Mini Chassis Tempered Glass PC Gaming Case

As a new addition to The Tower series, The Tower 200 has the same contours…

2 hours ago

be quiet! White Pure Base 500DX Windowed ARGB PC Gaming Case

Upgrade your gaming setup with the Pure Base 500DX case from be quiet! This impressive…

2 hours ago

Fractal Pop Air RGB Orange Core Mid Tower Tempered Glass PC Case

Fractal fuse flair with function in the new Pop series of cases that does not…

2 hours ago

League of Legends Community in Uproar as Riot Defends PC Bricking Anti Cheat

In the latest patch that has come to League of Legends, the developers have added…

2 hours ago

MSI AMD B450 GAMING PLUS MAX AM4 ATX Motherboard

MSI B450 GAMING PLUS MAX is designed with tons of connectivity, flexible tools, and DDR4…

2 hours ago