You have your terms confused. "Direct capture video" means that the system is hooked directly into a PC capture card (for example) and the video signal is saved as an AVI right away. Of course, this means that "normal" systems like PS2, DC, XBox, NES, whatever, are easy to do direct capture on since you can just take the cable transmitting the video signal and slap it into your capture card. A slightly simplified explanation, but that's the core of it.dave4shmups wrote:*shrugs* Well, somebody did it with a time-attack with PSP Star Soldier, and, considering that the PSP's a handheld, IMO it turned out pretty well. And keep in mind, the PSP was being held vertically the whole time; Sengoku Blade's a hori, so you wouldn't even have to do that. So, I don't see why someone couldn't capture video from Sengoku Cannon.icepick wrote:I'm guessing that it's a bit difficult to capture direct video of a handheld system, particularly a new one with a widescreen display. I say that all game systems (home, portable or... er... otherwise) should have AV out!
But for handheld systems, there is no such cable. So direct capturing usually requires some special hardware, something that's just not in the hands of a normal gamer. Or maybe a special version of the unit (like the PCE GT with AV out that was mentioned here some time ago).
The PSP Star Soldier vid you saw was not direct capture, it was taken with a video camera. The person who did it first played the game, then taking advantage of the game's replay function, he just placed both the PSP and his camera so that neither would move from their place and let the replay roll. All that was left was transferring the video from the camera to the computer. That's basically the same what I did with the Gaia Seed video a while back. You can see the image quality is much worse when compared to direct capture vids, though having a good camera for the task (which he did) helps some.