
This will make it the default choice for most apps that utilize an audio input without affecting your audio output.
#INSTALL RTX VOICE WINDOWS#
Set Microphone (NVIDIA RTX Voice) as your default input device in Windows "globally". It could reduce audio quality, mis-detecting parts of the music or a game's sound effects as "annoying audio" and trying to remove them.įor audio input, though, it's easier to do the opposite if you're using your mic primarily for chatting. Using RTX Voice on music streams or game audio could have the opposite effect than intended. That's why it's better to enable it only in communication-related apps and not "globally". RTX Voice works by detecting and removing audio frequencies that don't match those of the human voice. This is RTX Voice's virtual input device that "takes" the sound from the actual input device you chose (in RTX Voice app's settings) and cleans it from unwanted elements. Then, choose Voice & Video and change your INPUT DEVICE from your default microphone to Microphone (NVIDIA RTX Voice). To keep using Discord as our example, visit its settings. To use RTX Voice in any piece of software, you must select NVIDIA's virtual audio devices instead. Its installation doesn't affect the audio input and output of your actual audio devices. You can keep using Discord like that, but you won't be taking advantage of RTX Voice. Up to now, you'd have it configured to use your primary microphone and either a pair of headphones or some speakers. Let's say you're using Discord's voice chat features. Think of them as an extra layer on top of your audio devices.



There's a reason we've touched on how RTX Voice installs virtual audio devices: you have to use them to have it clean your audio.
