MAYA_GAMING_RIG (OBS)
Windows Defender flickered for a moment, then subsided. The installer window bloomed onto her screen: a stark, utilitarian dialog box with a pale blue progress bar. It asked for her OBS Studio directory. She pointed it to C:\Program Files\obs-studio\ . The "Install" button glowed like a dormant star. obs-ndi-4.11.1-windows-x64-installer.exe
Maya rebooted OBS on both machines. On her gaming PC, she added a new source. She scrolled past "Display Capture," "Game Capture," "Window Capture." There, nestled between "Media Source" and "VLC Video Source," was a new entry: . She pointed it to C:\Program Files\obs-studio\
Maya Chen stared at the blinking red “OFFLINE” indicator on her streaming deck. It was 11:47 PM. Her dual-monitor setup, usually a symphony of OBS scenes, chat logs, and game capture, felt like a graveyard. The problem wasn’t her gaming PC—that beast was purring. The problem was the other computer, the production rig three feet away. On her gaming PC, she added a new source