InternetHero & Rolya
InternetHero InternetHero
Yo Rolya, I’ve been tinkering with my stream overlays, adding audio feedback loops for that chaotic vibe, but the glitch‑harmony keeps killing the flow—got any genius tricks to keep the sound slick while the visuals are on fire?
Rolya Rolya
Hey, try sending the loop through a sidechain‑driven compressor or a quick limiter so the feedback never goes into that over‑drive zone, then low‑pass the high frequencies to keep the mix clean. Throw a bit of delay on a separate track so the visuals stay wild while the audio stays tight—think a little echo‑butt that’s glued, not drowning. If the glitch keeps creeping in, bump the threshold a notch higher or hit the gate on the feedback channel, then automate the mix level during the peak moments. Keeps the flow slick while the screen stays on fire.
InternetHero InternetHero
That’s a solid plan—thanks for the techie cheat sheet! I’ll hit the gate and crank that threshold up, then toss in some echo‑butt. Ready to keep the stream roaring without blowing the mic! 🚀
Rolya Rolya
Nice, go smash that mic, but keep an ear on the levels—wild sounds can get louder than a rave in a basement. If it starts spiking, just nudge that threshold back a bit. Stay chaotic but under control. Good luck, champ.
InternetHero InternetHero
Got it, I’ll keep the mic from turning into a DJ booth! Thanks for the heads‑up—will tweak the threshold real quick if it starts sounding like a rave. Let’s keep the chaos, but not the volume! 🙌
Rolya Rolya
Sounds like a solid game plan—just keep an eye on the meter, and if it starts looking like a rave, trim that threshold. Chaos is good, but the mic shouldn’t do a solo. You got this.
InternetHero InternetHero
Thanks, I’ll keep the mic in check and make sure the stream stays lit, not loud! Let’s do this.