Elgato has quietly unveiled its latest capture solution, the Game Capture 4K S, bringing high‑fidelity console recording within reach of more creators. Priced at $159.99, the 4K S undercuts its predecessor, the HD60 X, by $20 while unlocking 4K 60fps capture—an upgrade that once carried a hefty premium. The device goes on sale this week, positioning itself as an affordable middle ground between Elgato’s budget‑focused Neo card and last year’s pricier HDMI 2.1 models.
At launch, the HD60 X retailed for $179.99 and was limited to 4K 30fps recording; the new 4K S starts at $159.99 and delivers double the frame rate at 4K 60fps capture. That $20 reduction not only makes next‑gen recording more attainable but also closes the gap to the Neo, which sits at $129.99 yet tops out at 1080p 60fps. Against Elgato’s own HDMI 2.1 capture cards—which often demanded $200 or more for 4K 60fps + HDR recording—the 4K S feels downright generous.
Corsair’s confidence in the product shows in its warranty and ecosystem support. The 4K S ships with a two‑year warranty, matching premium expectations in a compact, USB‑C form factor. For creators balancing tight budgets with the itch for cinematic quality, the 4K S represents a compelling sweet spot in Elgato’s lineup.
Beyond its headline‑grabbing 4K 60fps capture, the 4K S refines passthrough capabilities. Gamers can now experience 4K 60fps with HDR and variable refresh rate (VRR), or dial up to 1440p 120fps for ultra‑smooth visuals. That’s a meaningful leap from the HD60 X’s 1440p 60fps limit, catering especially to competitive‑play content and fast‑motion titles. Analog audio input remains, allowing streamers to blend in microphone or mixer feeds without extra adapters.
Internally, Elgato hasn’t reinvented the wheel: it still uses HDMI 2.0 for input and output, ensuring unencrypted capture and lag‑free passthrough. Yet the zero‑latency preview—down to 30ms—pushes it into pro‑grade territory, useful when live commentary demands tight A/V sync.
One of the standout perks of the 4K S is its driver‑free, plug‑and‑play design. Out of the box, it works seamlessly with Windows 11 and macOS 13 (or later) in popular apps like OBS Studio, Discord, and TikTok Live Studio—no manual driver installs required. It even extends compatibility to iPadOS 18, so creators with iPad‑centered setups or Copilot Plus PCs powered by Qualcomm can record or stream on the go..
To manage recordings, Elgato has introduced the new Elgato Studio app, replacing its legacy 4K Capture Utility. The refreshed interface aligns with Windows 11’s design language, offers real‑time HDMI diagnostics, detailed input readouts, Stream Deck integration, and low‑resource snapshot tools for quick social‑media thumbnails. It’s a nod toward workflows that prize speed and simplicity as much as raw resolution.
For novice creators stepping up from console‑bound clips, the Neo still holds value at $129.99 for straightforward 1080p 60fps recording. But anyone eyeing long‑term growth or planning to pivot into 4K content will appreciate the 4K S’s headroom. Meanwhile, pros on a budget can skip the $200+ HDMI 2.1 cards and still unlock cinematic capture at competitive frame rates. Content partnerships, live events, and VRR‑heavy titles all run smoother when your capture hardware isn’t the bottleneck.
Elgato’s Game Capture 4K S is an exercise in pragmatic evolution: it refines key capabilities, slashes entry‑level pricing for 4K 60fps recording, and bundles a revamped software suite—all without breaking the bank. Whether you’re filming your first thousand‑sub Twitch stream or upgrading a seasoned dual‑PC rig, the 4K S is designed to meet you at every step of your journey. For $159.99, it’s hard to imagine a more balanced proposition for modern game creators.
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