HDMI Capture with AVerMedia Live Gamer Portable 2 Plus
Wednesday, January 8. 2020
HDMI or High-Definition Multimedia Interface is the de-facto connector and signaling for almost everything at your home having picture and sound. As the data in the pipe is digital, it is relatively easy to take some of it for your own needs. Typical such needs would include streaming your activities to The Net or extracting the data to your computer.
As the devices required are relatively inexpensive, I got one. Here it is, a AVerMedia Live Gamer Portable 2 Plus (or GC513 as AVerMedia people would call it):
It is a relatively small unit having couple of connectors in it:
The obvious ones are HDMI in and out. The micro-USB is for powering the unit and extracting the data out of it to a computer. If you want to do some live streaming of your fabulous gaming, there are 3.5mm jacks for headphones/mic. The last slot is for an SD-card if you want to make any recordings with the unit not connected to a computer.
Windows software is called RecCentral. A sample session with a Super NES Classic Edition (https://www.nintendo.com/super-nes-classic/) connected to it would look something like this:
The software is capable of producing high-quality JPEG stills, but mostly people are interested in the unit's capability of producing AVC (aka. H.264, aka. MPEG-4) video from your precious HDMI input.
Just looking at the red triangle-shaped box isn't much fun, so I took the unit for a real-life test. I did some video/still capturing which resulted as footage of some Super Metroid gameplay. The actual game is from year 1994 and HDMI didn't exist at that time. But the modern SNES actually does have HDMI-output in it, making it an interesting target for this test.
With help of Adobe Premiere Pro (Audition, After Effects, Photoshop) software:
I edited a nice all-bosses video from the game. The resulting video has been uploaded into YouTube as Super Metroid - All bosses:
All artistic decisions seen on the video are made by my son, whose YouTube channel the video is at. In this video-project I merely acted as a video technician (obviously, my son's video and sound editing skills aren't quite there yet). Also, the actual gameplay on the video is by my son. IMHO his gameplay is excellent, given his age doesn't have two digits in it. Especially the last two bosses took a lot of practice, but he seems to master it now.
Finally:
I totally recommend the AVerKey Live Gamer Portable 2 Plus for your trivial H.264 capturing. It really won't cut it for any serious work but packs enough punch for the simple things.
Also, if you enjoy the YouTube-video we made, give it your thumbs up. My son will appreciate it!