1.9 KiB
title | author | publishDate | lastMod | toc | draft | categories | tags | ||||||
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Split voice and game audio |
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2023-03-23 | 2023-03-23 | true | false |
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Changelog
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Attribution
{{< back_to_top >}} This tip is a syndicated copy of KemoNine's blog post. It has been split into this page and a related [anecdote]({{< ref "/anecdotes/kemonine-audio-processing-woes.md" >}}).
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What?
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This page outlines how to split your computer audio output so a game or aplication's audio is sent to your speaker and the voice audio is sent to a headset.
This can be helpful for those with speech processing needs. It allows you to isolate voice to a headset or similar which lets the voice audio come through more strongly than any other audio.
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Windows 10
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- Open main settings application
- Go to system settings
- Select Sound tab
- Click "Sound Control Panel" link on the right
- Right click the audio output device you want as the main audio and select "Set as default device". If the option is not present and the device has a green cicle checkbox, it's already the default device.
- Right click the headset output device you want as the communication audio and select 'Set as default communication device". If the option is not present and the device has a green circle checkbox, it's already the default device.
- Click on the microphone tab
- Right click your microphone and set it as the default if it doesn't have a green circle checkmark.
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Related Anecdotes
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- [Audio Processing Woes]({{< ref "/anecdotes/kemonine-audio-processing-woes.md" >}})
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