Bro i instantly felt that specific type of tired that you feel when you wake up from a shitty nap during a long ass flight, the captain telling about the weather or smth and how the landing is about to start
@@jayzon_yuhmama8970 common problem with laptops. just restart it again once or twice. else go in your settings, audio and see if you have the right output speaker selected
I love that for years, I have been searching "how to make my mic sound like a studio mic," and now it's just how to make my mic sound as bad as possible.
Always a pleasure to see a comment posted by you. When I was in high school, everyone talked about you like you were royalty lol. Good to see you're doing well for yourself after all this time
@@ichosolemanuel6048 its sounds exactly like a planes in-flight PA system used by the pilot thanks for making me explain a pretty simple joke, I hope you feel awful
best tutorial ever, you can make it better if you are on a discord voice chat and lowering the bitrate of it to 8kbps, now you AND your friends can enjoy having a microphone with sound quality of a WW2/Cold War era military radio
I always hated the lack of immersion in arma reforger with plane mods but thanks to you now i can finally get 100% immersed while flying my mi 24 and my teammates dont understanding 89% of what im saying
Just install the A10 for maximum immersion. Sounds like you're standing next to the real thing, that is, until the split second your eardrums rupture...
You can also cover your room's walls with metalic objects, preferably 3m long sheet metal roofings, and make sure to position yourself in the corner of the room, just to get that extra filthy reverb. Alternatively you can rent a 200 square meter warehouse and move your setup there. After you have done all this, you can then set up a long metal sylinder from your mouth directly into your mic. But make sure it is really long, like REALLY long, 2m at the least. You can thank me later.
Or you can just add a verry bad free reverb vst plugin using the same VoiceMeeter. Same effect basically. Don't forget delay, overdrive and maxed out compression on top of everything. Trust me, effect is amazing. Tried this last night and listen what came out of it and now my iq is 12, I lost my hearing and forgot how to speak english. Worth is, 100% recommend!
Oh that makes a lot more sense. I thought that using a cardboard tube would be good enough. I figured that I was just using the wrong kind of tape to hold it to my face.
Genuinely had to do this yesterday for a project, incredibly useful. I had to do my own thing to decrease video quality, I'd love to see your technique.
The entire video: "I'm going to show you how to make your mic terrible!" The last few seconds: "An alternate way to make your mic terrible is just buy a Logitech c920-"
To the two people above me: I don't get yall. I mean, the man was just expressing a part of the video he liked, it was harmless. But yall decided to ruin your own day smh my head 🙄🙄🙄
@@nox2889 because its on the cheaper side and relatively old at this point, sure it's not high quality by modern standards but if you use it right its far from bad, not nearly as bad as the usual webcam mic or the default mics on earbuds/headsets i dont see a reason to get it nowadays but if you still have it (like me) its better than using most other things that u can easily get
@@nox2889 Problem with the Blue Yeti is, it's basically a studio microphone. Great for podcasts or whatever but if you dare move in your room, let alone use a keyboard, it's dogshit
Holy shit. This is actually a great tip for any milsim players who want realistic sounding coms. I can imagine this working very well in a flight sim too…
You can also use a mic EQ to squish the low and high end frequencies together as tight as possible, to the point where you're basically just operating across a 500 hertz range. Also make sure that when you breathe on your mic slightly, the funny little line stays on the top of the gauge. And if you really wanna go the extra mile, buy a really thin sheet of metal, cut it out in a circle, and mount it around your microphone, preferably tune it to reverberate at every frequency the human voice can produce, to really get that authentic _'do you live in a colander WTF' experience._ Also there are some microphones which have built-in volume protections, just make sure to turn those _OFF._ If your microphone breaks slightly as a result, don't worry, *_that just adds to the experience._* EDIT: Also, you wanna pick one specific frequency, like 1470 hertz, and crank the frequency of that one up to 17-18K hertz, so that there's always some kind of high-pitch distortion that really screws with people who use earbuds. Preferably distort that frequency range a little bit as well, so it becomes a bit wider of an ear-splitting frequency hike. :) And this might be a bit advanced though: There are programs that let your microphone quality go lower than 8bit 8KHz. Like, much lower. This is really advanced levels of low quality though, so don't be surprised if there are repercussions to using that strategy in lobbies.
Thank you very much, I spent over $500 in audio equipment, but it came out too clean. Now I can properly sound like a Taco Bell drive-thru speaker playing grindcore. Jah bless. 🙏
Honestly, was kinda hoping that this was gonna be a short video on common mistakes people make when setting up their microphone that cause their voice to sound worse as a sort of reverse tutorial (essentially “avoid doing these things and you will avoid bad mic quality”), but this is good too
@@vsm1456well, make sure the quality matches on the virtual cable and the mic, or it will clip. So don’t set 1 to CD, and the other to studio or something
Here I am with a Blue Yeti mic thinking it's a good mic, and then I found out it's literally featured in a tutorial on how to make your mic sound like crap. Thanks, dad.
From what I know it's a perfectly fine mic if you know what you're doing, it's just that you can get something a lot nicer sounding for the same amount of money, or less in some cases
Honestly this is some great content. Ive used the VB Cable software to troll my friends on Discord using FL Studio as a voice changer, and ive been looking for ways to make my mic sound like trash, so this has really helped!
@@DgkYogi Same mate! I even upload some of my songs to my channel sometimes, but life has been really busy so I don't make music as much anymore, sadly. But still, cool to find you as well XD
This sounds exactly the same as radio communication in flying, like identical If you recorded mock transmissions between an aircraft and ATC I would not be able to discern it based on audio quality alone You have my respect sir
not even kidding. If you have a mic that sounds like this when streaming on twitch as a low viewer streamer. There is no doubt that you will gain followers and support faster than anyone else with "good" equipment.
Play this video in reverse to attain a crisp mic Also the reason 8000 hertz sounds way worse is that it's actually only capable of giving you 4000 herts [for reasons] in the output. it does a bunch of low passes which means all the high amplitudes get cut off making the output voice sound hollow and distant. I'm not an expert on this tho so do your own research if you want any actual understanding lol
This is actually really useful for me, I'm trying to make an audiobook type thing and I want all the voices to have a similar filtered sound on playback and I think this is what I'm going to do to some degree lmao, feels retro.
I recommend using a pop filter to get rid of breathing, that can be super distracting in any audiobook. Alternatively, you can use a noise filter in Audacity to filter out any breathing noise, that’s how I whistle into my mic without capturing the wind sound
You should record it clean and apply effects, this is really easy to do with an EQ and some distortion (bit reduction or saturation or whatever you like). Gives you more control and you have the clean sound to use if you need it.