WoW Rookie: How to record game footage on a Mac
World of Warcraft has a particularly cool feature on Macs that doesn't exist on its Windows PC counterparts. If you play WoW on a Mac, you can record video in the game itself without the help of any third-party program. This isn't a fancy, complicated video, but it's a great first step toward making your own machinima, instructional videos, or fun films to share with friends.
Recording game footage through your Mac isn't difficult. When you're getting ready to create video, make sure you have your game set up the way you'd like it. Are the graphics right? Are all of your addons in order? Trust me: People care about your UI setup when they see game footage, and it will matter to them. Once you have those things in order, it's time to get started.
Find and set your video recording options
You can find your video recording settings under Mac Options in the game menu. Hit Escape to get to the game menu. These options allow you to customize the video you'll be recording.
- Resolution determines the size of your video output. The higher the resolution, the larger your video file will be. You can record a longer video using smaller resolutions. Of course, higher resolution videos tend to be better quality. It's a trade-off.
- Framerate decides how many frames per second will be used in your video. This is important because you need a consistent framerate while recording your video. Setting your FPS to something smaller will cap the game's framerate itself, allowing you to produce a more consistent video overall.
- Compression is a technical setting that probably won't affect your first videos, but you can change the compression method once you get a little more experience. Which compression method you prefer will depend on what post-production activity you're doing. For now, just leave it set to default.
- Quality allows you to determine how much space your video will use versus how refined it will look.
- You can also determine whether your player interface will show up in the video, whether you'll see a recording icon, when the video gets compressed and ready for export, and a few other things.
Pressing record
By default, the recording controls are:
- Start or stop recording Ctrl+[
- Cancel recording and compression Shift+]
- Compress movies Ctrl+]
- Show/Hide User Interface Ctrl+'
I logged into the game and pressed Ctrl+[. I greeted the world and then pressed Ctril+[ again to stop. if you're using all the default settings, WoW will automatically compress the video for you. I have it set to wait for me to manually press Compress, since I don't want the video compression to slow me down during raiding, so I pressed Ctrl+] to compress right away.
Find the video you recorded
Now that you've made your first video, go to your Finder. By default in Mac OS X Lion, the video is in your Applications folder in the World of Warcraft subfolder. When you first record the video, it will be named after the location you recorded it in and the time.
Preview the video immediately to make sure you record what you wanted. Assuming you like the way it turned out, you can upload it directly to YouTube through the sharing button in QuickTime Player.
Dress it up
Of course, you can also dress the movie up using tools like iMovie. At that point, you can let your imagination roll. Here are some helpful tips to get started with these home WoW recordings:
- Start small. You don't need to go crazy with your first videos. While you're learning how it all works, don't record videos longer than a few seconds. While Macs are powerful computers, manipulating a longer video will take up time. You need to be able to see the effects of your work right away, not wait hours for videos to render and compress.
- Don't get frustrated. Do you know Wowcrendor? Check out his first video we featured on the site. Over the years, Wowcrendor's skills have blossomed. Don't worry if your first efforts aren't gorgeous masterpieces. That comes with time.
- Focus on content. Don't worry about the visuals in your videos until you have solid content ideas. Again, take a lesson from Wowcrendor. His videos weren't machinimated for a long time; they were essentially narrations over in-game footage. But everyone loves Wowcrendor because he's focused on fun stories, not animated effects.
Filed under: WoW Rookie






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Goins2754 Aug 5th 2011 12:07PM
How do I upload in HD? Every video on YouTube today is posted in 720 or 1080. I can't figure out how do do this with the Mac recording stuff.
archbaotho Aug 4th 2011 3:26PM
Lately I've been having a bug where when I play back my recorded movie it has the mouse flipped along a horizontal axis on the middle of the screen. It's the only thing affected, and it looks weird clicking my healing bars when my mouse is up above everything else. Any idea how to fix this or even why it's happening?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dqnX0B5a2-8
for reference, and also shameless plug of my youtube channel.
nbcaffeine Aug 4th 2011 3:35PM
It's a known bug: http://us.battle.net/wow/en/forum/topic/2743687199
I disabled the mouse for now, which makes a healer even more boring to watch.
Qeww Aug 4th 2011 3:37PM
It've been nothing bu lazy, cause I've seen this option before but never took the time to check it out.
Thanks for the push, cause now the movie making will start!!
Game On!!
Professor Orc Aug 4th 2011 3:51PM
This is one of the things I missed the most about switching my WoW computer from a mac to a PC. It was so easy to use that I was able to record every memorable moment in one of my character's career like little home videos.
Really wish Blizz adds this to PCs in the future.
MightyMuffin Aug 4th 2011 4:06PM
I never knew that PCs couldn't do it until now. I actually was planning to do some awesome video stuff for the guild since I just bought parts to build a beast of a machine. Knowing now that it won't be simple to record things in game...and that my Mac laptop is a paperweight after the HDD crashed...for the third time...sigh, I miss having decent computers.
lownwolf Aug 4th 2011 4:10PM
I've used this many times before but didn't know you could turn off auto-compress.
If you turn this option off, does it save up multiple movies and then compress them at once, or does it only save 1 movie at a time and you overwrite the older one?
Grubba Aug 4th 2011 4:56PM
It will save them up, each movie file individually in an unprocessed format, until you tell it to start compressing them. They'll stay there until you compress or delete them manually.
Zabre Aug 4th 2011 5:58PM
WOW rookie 101: If you are using a mac throw it away and get a PC.
Cambro Aug 4th 2011 7:37PM
Ban hammer in 3...2...
jfofla Aug 4th 2011 8:07PM
@ Zabre or you could join us in the Future
anderekel Aug 4th 2011 6:54PM
I couldn't quite tell but it looks like it won't record sound?
Grubba Aug 5th 2011 4:57AM
It does record sound. I don't know why the example videos seem silent.
Cambro Aug 4th 2011 7:37PM
Two helpful tips:
I'm on a 24" iMac with a nice processor and graphics card, but I have yet to be able to successfully record video while in Bastion of Twilight or Blackwing Descent. It will start to record but after a few seconds the game freezes up (for several seconds), then it stops recording and I get my game back, with an error about the graphics settings are too high for my computer. I suspect what the actual problem is, is that there is so much red/orange, it's choking trying to handle me playing and recording at the same time. I turned down the settings as much as I could and still be able to see to tank, still chokes. Hopefully this will get fixed soon.
The other thing: please remember to back up your Movies folder inside your World of Warcraft folder. You'll be furious with yourself if you ever have to reinstall the game and accidentally throw away your folder of video memories.
excorgh Aug 4th 2011 9:37PM
This is because you've set the recording quality to high for your HD to handle. Either set it to record to the external drive or lower the recording resolution/quality.
paulduchesne1337 Aug 4th 2011 8:02PM
My record key is "[" for start and "]" for stop. I made little videos all the time by accident.... (And sometimes i make huge videos by accident....)
Coldbear Aug 5th 2011 3:35PM
Upgrade your RAM, and don't buy it from Apple. You can literally save about 80-90% percent on the same stuff by buying from an aftermarket supplier.
Then get cracking on recording PVP and PVE with no pesky UI, while playing normally. See my stuff on WCM.
1h 33min long PVE video with very little UI clutter.
crystallinegirl Aug 6th 2011 9:15PM
I blame this column for keeping me up until 4 am this morning. But I now have my very first machinima, of what will probably be many!!
http://youtu.be/ePQ5YMalVoM