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If recorded video looks choppy, sometimes it means your video player is not good enough to play back video fast enough, this typically happen when you set high video record frame rate. High video recording framerate may also contribute to very large file size.
I use standard windows 10 Film&TV as video player and I also tried Windows Media Player.
Also the framerate was set to 35 fps but it got higher as I could see by the fps counter.
The video gets heavy chops at the same areas too even with different players.
And these players have worked with the other software without any chops at the same fps limit.
Good news!!! Putting D3DGear at high priority inside the task manager removed the choppy things when I re-recorded the exact same things I did when it wasn't on high priority. So Don't worry about that anymore, I'm just curious about file size now ^^