---
title: 'How to Set Up a Professional Kick Stream with OBS Studio'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=WS6x4yW_THw'
video_id: 'WS6x4yW_THw'
date: 2026-07-11
duration_sec: 1184
---

# How to Set Up a Professional Kick Stream with OBS Studio

> Source: [How to Set Up a Professional Kick Stream with OBS Studio](https://youtube.com/watch?v=WS6x4yW_THw)

## Summary

This tutorial provides a step-by-step guide to setting up a professional Kick stream using OBS Studio, covering everything from installation and scene creation to audio routing and quality optimization, all for free.

### Key Points

- **Introduction to Streaming Setup** [00:01] — The video addresses the common problem of feeling discouraged when streaming to an empty chat, and promises a complete guide to setting up a professional Kick stream using OBS Studio.
- **Downloading and Installing OBS Studio** [00:29] — OBS Studio is downloaded from obs-project.com for free. It is lightweight and the industry standard for streaming software.
- **Understanding OBS Interface** [00:44] — The preview screen is the main window viewers see. Scenes are like rooms, and sources are the furniture (webcam, gameplay, etc.).
- **Connecting OBS to Kick** [01:39] — In OBS settings, under Stream, select Custom. Then get the stream URL and key from Kick's Creator Dashboard. Copy the URL and key into OBS to connect.
- **Creating Scenes and Adding Sources** [03:09] — Rename the default scene to 'Gameplay'. Add a video capture device for webcam, then add an image source for the webcam overlay. Ensure the overlay is above the webcam in the source list.
- **Adding Gameplay Capture** [05:47] — Add a game capture source. Use 'Capture specific window' for best performance. If game capture fails, use window capture or display capture as fallback.
- **Creating Just Chatting and Starting Soon Scenes** [07:43] — Create a 'Just Chatting' scene with webcam full screen. Create a 'Starting Soon' scene with an image source. Use 'Add Existing' to reuse webcam across scenes.
- **Audio Routing Without a Mixer** [09:49] — Disable all default audio devices in OBS settings. Add audio input capture for microphone, and application audio capture for game audio. Copy and paste audio sources to each scene to maintain consistency.
- **Optimizing Video and Output Settings** [13:06] — Set base canvas resolution to monitor resolution (e.g., 1080p). Output scaled resolution should be 1080p or 720p. Use Lanczos downscale filter. Set FPS to 60. In Output settings, use advanced mode, select NVENC H.264 for Nvidia or AMD HW H.264 for AMD. Set rate control to CBR with bitrate up to 8000 for Kick.
- **Going Live and Monitoring Stream** [15:35] — Click 'Start Streaming' in OBS. Monitor the status bar for dropped frames and bitrate. If issues occur, lower bitrate or resolution. Use Kick's Creator Dashboard to manage stream info and view activity.
- **Adding Chat to OBS** [17:06] — Pop out the chat from Kick, copy the URL, and add a custom browser dock in OBS. This allows viewing and sending messages within OBS.
- **Post-Stream Review and Final Tips** [18:11] — Stop streaming and check VODs in Kick to review stream quality. Adjust audio levels if needed. The video concludes with a reminder that tech setup alone won't attract viewers; a strategy is needed.

### Conclusion

The video provides a complete, free setup for a professional Kick stream using OBS Studio, but emphasizes that technical quality alone won't attract viewers; a pre-stream checklist and traffic strategy are essential for success.

## Transcript

only viewer in your chat is just a bot trying to sell you some cheap graphics. It is completely soul-crushing. But in 2026, you don't need a $400 mixer or a NASA supercomputer to fix it. Today is your ultimate zero fluff Kick Master
Class. I'm going to show you exactly how to download OBS Studio, create a professional stream layout, route your audio perfectly for free, and plug in the exact secret settings the top 1% of Kick streamers use. So, let's build your
brain of your operation. Head over to obs-project.com, and download OBS Studio for your machine, whether that's Windows or Mac completely free and runs super light on your PC and it is the undisputed
industry standard for streaming software. So, download it, install it, first time, it looks like a terrifying black void. But don't freak out. See this massive giant black box at the top of the screen? This is your preview
screen. Think of this as your entire TV screen. This is the exact window that they watch your stream. Right now, it's empty because we haven't added anything to it yet. Now, down in the bottom left, we have this little box where it says
rooms in your house. We're going to have a room that's called gameplay for our gameplay, obviously. Then right next door to the right, we have our sources. sources are going to be the actual furniture. This is where your webcam,
gameplay are going to live. Now, before we move the furniture into these rooms to sign the lease with the network in the house. So, we're going to go to the settings. We're going to click on that. Then we're going to navigate to the
left-hand side where it says stream. So, click on stream. And then at the very unfortunately, right now they don't have a Kick option. So, we got to click on custom. And now we need to jump over to kick.com to get some information to plug
in. So, we can actually connect our Kick stream to OBS Studio. So, once you're going to go to the top right corner and click your icon, and then we're going to creator dashboard. Then, on the left-hand side here, we're going to see
a little button that says stream URL and key, so click on that. And a quick word of warning, you need to treat this page right here as your social security or anyone else because they can literally hijack your stream from you.
So, the first thing we need to do is hit this little icon right here, and that's you can actually protect your information. But, now that we have access to this information, we need to click on this little square right here,
link. So, click on that. It's going to copy the link, and we're going to go back to OBS Studio. And that stream URL that we just copied, we're going to paste this in as the server. And then, we need to go back to Kick real quick.
going to do the exact same thing for the stream key. You're going to see a little conveniently hidden behind my webcam, just like there. So, click these two squares to copy it. And then, now we're going to paste that new one, the stream
key, into the stream key box. Now, we're going to hit apply and okay, and now our Kick account is talking to OBS Studio. So, they're now connected. Now, we need to actually move the furniture into the house and make your stream look
scenes. First things first, we're going to rename this new scene, so we're going to right click on it, and we're going to hit rename, and we're going to call it anywhere outside the box, and this is now our gameplay room. Now, you have two
options. You can go to canva.com and spend your entire weekend designing overlays, borders, and panels from scratch, totally for free, and that is totally fine. But, if you value your time, or you're honestly just super lazy
my exact setup. I built a streamer going to need, and I put an absolutely massive discount link at the top of the description, where you can grab this entire graphics pack for under the price
of an overpriced coffee, and you'll have your stream looking pro in 60 seconds streamer starter pack to save us both some time. So, let's build our gameplay patootie face of yours. We're going to go over to our sources and we're going
click on that and then we're going to click on video capture device. Notice obviously it's a little camera. So, we're going to click on video capture device and you can call this whatever, but I'm going to call it webcam to keep
things easy. Then we're going to hit okay. And now we're going to choose from to use. So, when you've chosen your webcam, you're going to simply hit okay. And now you're able to place your webcam anywhere on the screen that you'd like.
Since this is a gameplay scene, I'm going to make this a lot smaller so that which would kind of defeat the whole purpose, right? So, this seems to be a heard in my life before, but that's not the point of this video. And you can
resize it using these corners here. But now let's add the actual webcam overlay So, we're going to go to sources. I'm going to hit the plus button. And if you have an animated overlay, you'll use a media source, but mine is static today,
click on an image source. We'll call this one webcam overlay and then we'll hit okay. Then we'll hit the browse button under image file. So, click on starter pack or if you spent hours in Canva, you'll do the same thing there.
I'm going to go to my overlays and then I'm going to change this so I can actually see what they look like and I need one that is 16 by 9. So, I can choose from overlay one or two. Let's go with one to keep things easy and then
hit okay. Now we have our overlay here. So, we're going to hit okay. And now we need to resize this overlay so it actually fits over our webcam. But the important part here is that your webcam overlay source needs to be above the
webcam. Otherwise, if it's below, your webcam's going to cover the dang which we'll add in a second. So, the order that you have your sources is very each other. Kind of like a Krabby Patty.
for a gameplay scene, we need our gameplay, right? Duh. So, let me boot up a game real quick. In order to add the actual gameplay to our OBS, we need to go down to sources and then hit the plus button, and we have three choices. The
best choice is going to use game capture. However, if you're having issues with game capture, the next best choice is to use window capture. And if to use display capture. And display
screen, so it would show sensitive information, so you need to be comfortable and know that's what happens when you use a display capture. But, fine with game capture or window capture, so let's start with game
capture. So, I'm going to click on game capture. We can leave it to game capture what that is, right? So, we're going to hit the okay button, and I'm going to have to choose capture specific window, and I'm going to choose my game from
Golf With Your Friends, which is right here, or whatever game you're playing. to load, and it'll pop up right here. Quick pro tip for you, if you're using the capture specific window option, you need to change the window if you change
With Friends, and let's say you switch to Among Us, you'll have to go in and it here. Otherwise, it's going to be blank. However, if you're using capture any full screen application, nine times out of 10, it'll automatically switch to
said, if game capture doesn't work, try a window capture or display capture. But, once you have it up, we're going to hit okay, and now we have our gameplay. the top of the source list, it's actually covering all the stuff behind
it, like our webcam overlay and webcam. So, we simply just have to click and to the bottom, and we actually did a pretty good job lining up our little webcam in the overlay. In order to move both of them at the same time, I'm going
down control, and then I'm going to click on webcam. Now, we have both of them highlighted, so I can simply click and drag wherever I want them on my here for Golf. That looks pretty good. And badaboom, badabing, we got a
professional gameplay scene for our kick stream. So now let's move on to the just chatting scene. So we're going to go to the scenes in the bottom left corner and hit the plus button and we're going to call this just chatting, if I
can type it out correctly. Then we're going to hit okay. Now we have another blank room. For this one, traditionally you just want to have your webcam full We're going to hit the plus button under sources and we're going to do video
capture device. However, since we've already added our webcam to make things this add existing option because we already have it in our gameplay scene. So we're going to hit add existing and then click on webcam. So once that's
selected, we're going to hit okay and now we have our webcam. However, since I'm using my crappy integrated webcam on my laptop, I actually need to stretch this to be full screen. So you can do it the lazy way by dragging the corners or
you can simply right click it and then go to transform and then at the very bottom we're going to choose fit to screen. So click on that and we've done button. And this is literally your just chatting scene, you're done. Now let's
starting soon screen. So we're going to go in the scenes in the bottom left corner, click the plus button. We'll call this one starting soon because We're going to hit okay. Now we'll go under sources once again, hit the plus
button and this time if you have an animated starting soon screen, you'll use media. But if we're using a static one like today, we'll be using the image source because that's static. So we'll call this starting soon screen and then
browse button under image file, so click on browse. If you're using my streamer starter pack, it'll be in the screens folder, but if you're using your Canva just navigate to that file. I'm going to double click on the starting soon screen
option, so click on that. It's going to add it in just like that, hit okay and your starting soon screen is done. Just like that. Easy peasy. Now we have three soon screen for when you got to pee, do whatever business you got to do when
just chatting scene, so you can talk to them or just shoot the crap with them. And then you can also click on gameplay for the nitty-gritty heavy arc raiders, whatever gameplay you're playing. And
different scenes in order to switch between them. Now we arrive at step number three, and this is the number one reason why most streamers fail on Kick. separate your game audio from your Discord audio, you had to spend 300
bucks on a physical audio mixer. And we're broke AF. But luckily, we don't Studio fixed it. All you got to do is go to the settings in the bottom right going to go to the left and click on the
audio tab, so click on audio. And you're going to make sure that all of these say disabled. So desktop audio, all the way down to mic aux audio four, they're all disabled. So make sure these are all turned off, then hit apply and okay. Now
middle is completely blank, which is perfect because now we have total control to build out our sound. So the first thing we'll do is go to the left the plus button. And we're going to scroll up to where it says audio input
microphone icon. So if you guys are getting ideas, you're probably right. So we'll click on audio input capture. I'm going to call this one microphone, and the device, we're going to click on default, and we're actually going to
using. So I'm going to click on my Rode Pod Mic USB, and I'm going to hit okay. bar right here that says microphone. And you'll also notice that if I wanted to icon, and then my stream will not hear me. However, I want them to hear me, and
you can drag this little bar here to make yourself louder or softer. And you talking, this little bar goes up and down. But there's one important thing that you need to know about your audio. It is completely independent and
separate from each scene. So what we need to do is go to starting soon. We're going to right click on the microphone, and we're going to hit copy. Then, we'll go to whatever scene we want to have our microphone in, like gameplay and just
chatting, and we're going to right click under sources, and we're going to paste repeat that for the other scenes, like just chatting. So, we're going to right click, and then we're going to paste reference. So, now we have a microphone
really important. Otherwise, you're going to be on mute, and we don't want scene, we want to have our game audio, right? So, we're going to go and hit the we're going to do application audio capture. So, click on that. I'm going to
call this one game audio, and we're going to hit okay. And then, for the whatever your game is. So, Golf With Your Friends is what we're playing, so we're going to hit okay. Now, you can see it has a little bar going up and
With Friends audio, and I have my microphone. And so, you're starting to understand the concept of adding audio to your scenes. Now, when we go to just microphone, because you don't really need the game audio there, right? If you
wanted to add your music, for example, or you have the Spotify app downloaded for music, you'll just do the same thing. You'll go to sources, hit the plus button, go to application audio capture, you can type this in as music,
hit okay, and then you'll find whatever window you're using for your music. So, whatever, you'll just select it from there. And you'll do the same thing for your Discord audio, too. And by doing it this way, you have total control over
your audio, and you don't need to spend $300 on a freaking audio mixer. So, scenes with all of your different audio sources, make sure everything has move on to the next step. Now, we move on to step four. This is where we fix
your pixelated and laggy stream. We're going to go back down to the settings in button. Then, we're going to go to the video tab. The base canvas resolution at the top is literally the resolution of the physical monitor you're playing on.
So, I'm playing on a 1080p monitor, so I'm going to make sure this end number says 1080. If you're using a 4K monitor, you'll have a 4K option. And then the output scaled resolution is what you want to stream at. So in this case, I
would like to stream at 1080p and I'm playing on a 1080p monitor, so these playing on a 4K monitor, I highly recommend still streaming at 1080p. And whatever, you can actually bump this down to 720 at the end. Because having a
important than having a heavily pixelated laggy stream. So you might I would recommend starting at 1080 if different, you'll need to choose a downscale filter. So in this case, let's
recommend choosing Lanczos because that's going to give you the best quality. And then your common FPS values, make sure it says 60 because ensures it's just buttery smooth. So for
my case, I'm going to be streaming on a 1080p monitor, so that's 1080. And then I want to stream at 1080p 60 frames per second. And since these are the same, for my setup, that's what this is going to look like. I'm going to hit apply and
then we're going to move on to the output tab. First thing we want to do is switch the output mode at the top from simple to advanced. For the video encoder right here, if you're running an Nvidia graphics card like I am, you'll
want to use Nvidia NVENC H.264. And if you're rocking an AMD graphics card, then you'll want to use AMD HW H.264. This takes all the stress off of your computer's processor and puts it on your graphics card where it belongs. the
to where it says rate control. This needs to be constant bit rate or CBR. bit rate. Because Kick allows for massive quality, we actually want to change the bit rate from the standard 6,000 on Twitch and we can crank that up
to 8,000. And this number will give you crystal clear quality on Kick if your internet speed, computer, and settings can handle it. So if your stream is either lagging or it looks like doggy doo-doo, I would lower the bit rate down
to 6,000. And if you're still lagging, you might need a better internet speed also lower this down to 4,500 if you're really struggling. And that's really all we have to change with the actual quality. So we're going to hit apply and
five. You built the car, now it's time to start that engine. We're going to look in the bottom right corner OBS, right below my webcam, and you're going streaming. Once you click this button, as I'm going to do right now, it's going
to connect and it's connected to our Kick stream and now it says stop that means our stream will end. However, we need to pay really close attention to going to see drop frame zero, which is good. You can see our 8,000 kilobits per
second with green bar, that's great. If this is red or yellow, then that's not settings, whether that's the bit rate or dropping your video resolution to 720 like we mentioned in the video tab. And then everything else looks good here. 60
everything is live right now, so let's it out in action. So you can see we are currently live streaming on kick.com. by the way, if you ever have any questions, come check out the stream. I
what we want to do is actually go to the top right corner and click our icon, and dashboard. This is going to be every streamer's home base. You're going to which if you need to save on some bandwidth or whatever, we can pause that
you'll be able to see your session info like the amount of viewers you currently have, how many followers, your subs, how long you've been live for. You got your Riz, shout out Riz. You'll be able to change your stream info up here with
change your title, your game category, all that stuff. You can also see your activity feed, so anytime you get a follower or sub, that'll show up here. forth. So now that the stream is up and running and we have some activity in
actually add your chat into OBS so you don't have to switch back and forth all the time. What you want to do first is go to your chat, go to the very bottom going to click on pop out chat. From here, we're going to copy this URL at
the top. So, we're going to hit Ctrl C or right-click and then copy. Then, Then, we'll go to docks at the very top, custom browser docks. We need a dock name, so I'm going to call it Kick Chat.
And then for the URL, we're going to Ctrl V or right-click paste, and then hit apply. Now, we have our Kick Chat, and all we have to do is drag the top here, and then we can put it anywhere that we want inside OBS, and it'll just
snap in. Then, you'll just hit close, you'll accept all. You might have to log in, but that's fine. And you'll be able to send messages and read messages all same thing with some of the other stuff, like your session info, your stream
creator dashboard up and running, which I totally get. And you can rinse and repeat for all the other necessary information you want in your OBS Studio. running successfully and working good, we can hit the stop streaming button in
OBS Studio right here, give it a second, and then if you'll go over to your creator dashboard in Kick, you'll notice that the stream is now offline, and you should be able to go to your studio icon, go to VODs, and you'll see that
here. So, all you have to do is simply click on it, and it'll bring you to your loading, and you'll be able to actually go back and watch your stream to see if correctly, you were muted, or you have to adjust the game volume a little bit
lower than your mic using these little bars right here. Which by the way, your the yellow, maybe peaking in the yellow occasionally. And your game audio should maybe about half of your microphone. But go back and rewatch your stream on the
hear it yourself. But you did it. Your layout is dialed in, and your audio is settings are mathematically optimized for 2026. But I'm going to be brutally doesn't automatically make people click your channel. If you just hit go live
right now without a strategy, you're going to be sitting in an empty room for the next 6 months. Before your actual first broadcast, you need two things. First, you need my completely free pre-stream cheat sheet. It's the exact
pilot's checklist I use to guarantee my tech never fails when I go live, so you download the PDF for free right at the top of the description as well. Second, traffic. So, click on the video right here to the side of me where I break
down the exact strategy to solve your zero viewer problem and actually get people in your chat. So, grab the free cheat sheet, click on that video, and cheat sheet, click on that video, and I'll see you there.
