The core promise of Nvidia Broadcast is simple: turn any room into a studio. Using deep learning, it removes background noise, replaces or blurs backgrounds, and keeps your face perfectly framed—all in real-time with minimal latency.
: If your voice sounds robotic or extremely loud, it's often due to a conflict with Windows "Audio Enhancements," which should be disabled for the virtual NVIDIA device. Nvidia Broadcast V1.0.0.25
Released in the early stages of the remote work and streaming boom, V1.0.0.25 represents a critical milestone. It wasn't just another beta; it was the first stable build that proved RTX GPUs could replace expensive hardware. In this article, we will explore what makes this specific version unique, its system requirements, key features, performance benchmarks, and whether you should seek out this older build or upgrade to the latest suite. The core promise of Nvidia Broadcast is simple:
: Automatically filters out background sounds like mechanical keyboards, vacuum cleaners, and fans from your microphone input. Released in the early stages of the remote
: Improves camera quality in low-light situations by reducing "static" or graininess in the video feed. System Requirements GPU : Requires an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 Go to product viewer dialog for this item. , Quadro RTX 3000 Go to product viewer dialog for this item. , TITAN RTX Go to product viewer dialog for this item.
If you are looking for the absolute latest features, you might want to check the NVIDIA Broadcast Website for , which includes significant improvements to eye contact and background stability. PSA: NVIDIA Broadcast causes Zoom to not respond and crash.
Testing conducted on an RTX 2080 Super + Intel i9-9900K @ 3.6 GHz: