Sequencer: Render is brighter than in editor and Choppy

Hello all. So I’ve got my scene setup and a few shots. All of that is great. For reference, I’ve made an interior environment with only one window. It’s night time and the moon can shine through the window.

However, when I try to render a video (through Sequencer, not Matinee) my results are…

  1. Render is choppy/laggy.

  2. Render is brighter than in the Unreal editor.

Things I’ve done to ensure good quality render:

  1. Scalability is set to epic.

  2. In Render Movie Settings for sequencer, Frame Rate set to 60.

  3. In Render Movie Settings for sequencer, Resolution set to 1920 x 1080.

  4. In Render Movie Settings for sequencer, Enable Texture Streaming disabled.

  5. In Render Movie Settings for sequencer, Use Compression disabled.

  6. In Render Movie Settings for sequencer, Use Separate Process enabled.

  7. In Render Movie Settings for sequencer, Cinematic Mode enabled.

  8. In General Options within Sequencer, Force Fixed Frame Interval Playback disabled.

I’ve read on forums that using a Post Processing Volume, which I am, can cause problems?

In my PPV, I’m using…

  1. Global Illumination.

  2. Bloom.

  3. Color Grading.

  4. Tone Mapping (specifically Tonemapper709).

  5. Whatever else is turned on by default.

Other things I’m using…

  1. Atmospheric Fog.

  2. Light Source.

  3. Point Lights.

  4. Spot Lights.

  5. Reflection Orbs.

  6. Lightmass Importance Volume.

  7. Sky Sphere.

  8. Sky Light.

I suspect that when Sequencer renders, it’s not taking into account the Tonemapper709 I have activated, thus making it brighter. I don’t have this Tonemapper activated by default (which I think you can tell Unreal to do). Each time I load up my project I have to go into the Output Log to activate the Tonemapper. Is this a problem?

As for the choppy renders, I have no clue. My computer is pretty beefy so I’m not worried at all that it’s a performance issue. However, I can’t exactly rule that out, but I’m confident my computer is fine.

Well seeing how I’m pressed for time, I came with a work around. For reference, I’m working with Unreal 4.13 Sequencer. You will need (I think) an Nvidia Graphics card because they have a video/audio recording app built into their Geforce Experience desktop app. If you don’t have an Nvidia graphics card, perhaps you can just download the desktop app and get the access to the recording app? But I can’t confirm this.

  1. Create your scene and make it look perfect. However you want to. Go nuts.

  2. Create your “master” level sequencer that will hold all of your shots.

  3. Create your shots and make sure they’re inside the “master” level sequencer.

  4. Edit shots. Magic. Poof. Play it and make sure they look exactly how you want them to. You can use play rates and whatever else you want.

  5. Here comes the part with the work around. Open up your Level Blueprint and create this:

https://puu.sh/vx8KJ/a080bcd922.jpg

What this will allow to happen is when you press “Play” in your editor, your “master” level sequence will play all of your shots. You can full screen this as well by pressing F-11

  1. Open up your Geforce Experience desktop app and find the recording app settings. Make them whatever you want to be. You can change file locations, hotkeys, HUD info, etc.

  2. Play your video in Unreal, fullscreen, and record using Geforce Experience. This part may/may not depend how great your computer is, but as long as your video plays smooth and looks great in Unreal, you’ll get the same quality through your recording. No choppy results. No weird lighting or shadows. None of that. Just a clean recording.

Hope this helps anybody out there at all with rendering out your Sequencer shots. I’m sorry if this is “noob” level advice, but I didn’t know it until I spent hours scouring the internet =P Cheers everyone. I hope this does some good.

I don’t know if my problem is considered a bug or not, or whether I have no idea what I’m doing (very likely). Technically this process works, so I’ll make it as “answered”, however the problem still exists within Unreal.

PS. If during your video, while it’s playing, if you see any pesky UI elements pop up like “OMG REBUILD YOUR LIGHTING”, I found another forum that shows how to disable these messages temporarily.