Counter-Strike 2

Counter-Strike 2

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sl0th 31 ENE 2014 a las 5:51 p. m.
Find downloaded matches?
Is there a way for me to find my downloaded matches to upload to YouTube?
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Mostrando 76-81 de 81 comentarios
rich handsome 13 JUL 2017 a las 6:52 p. m. 
are you guys ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ serious? look how old this ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ post is omg
Wickedness 23 AGO 2017 a las 3:16 a. m. 
Publicado originalmente por YUNG vice:
are you guys ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ serious? look how old this ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ post is omg
then why comment
DuffAldri 24 FEB 2018 a las 9:24 p. m. 
.









Just making this discussion still alive
Buhroocykins 12 MAR 2018 a las 10:34 p. m. 
So, after reading some of this (not really checking for already solutions). In your game, you can record demo, and replays. Replays are better so you can see everyone POV and move camera freely. Demo is your forced POV. Difference is 32 tick for replays, and the server tickrate for your demo. When viewing a demo with console command: "playdemo example_demo" you view your demo, and with replays you see the server replay. Type in console: "demoui" to open up the demo ui. In both cases, the file name will appear at the top of the little ui. Right click CS:GO, go to properties, the local files, then browse local files. Then proceed to "csgo" here you will find your demos you recorded in the console beforehand. You can view these with the console. To find your replays, proceed to the "replays" folder. Remember how I said that the demo ui ingame shows the file name as well? Well, keep the replays folder open, start up CS:GO, go to WATCH, go to YOUR MATCHES, click the recent match you want, then DOWNLOAD the match you wish to see. Before I forget, go in windowed mode before or after the match is downloaded. Now, click WATCH ON GOTV (top right of the map background, near the trash). Did you keep both file explorer and CS:GO open at the same time? Alright, in CS:GO type in console: "demoui" look at that file name... Delicious. Ok, in file explorer, in the replays folder. Use shortcut "ctrl + f" to find a file (unless its just the one game replay). look back at CS:GO while its windowed. Look at the file name at the top of the demo ui. Should be match730_##############_##########_###.demo (number variation or similar look may occur because myeah). Anyways look back at your file explorer, using the shortcut from earlier, start typing in the first digit that seems to VARY from the REST. Example. I have FOUR files starting with match730_00326# (# <-- different number) search for the different number, and start typing that in instead of "match730" every time. You should quickly find your demo you have been looking for. Congrats! You have now accessed your DEMO file you have been looking for from replays. You can now upload your file to, wherever you want, and view it as, well, a CS:GO demo, but from anyone's POV.
Wickedness 13 MAR 2018 a las 8:58 a. m. 
Publicado originalmente por Bruce The Goose:
So, after reading some of this (not really checking for already solutions). In your game, you can record demo, and replays. Replays are better so you can see everyone POV and move camera freely. Demo is your forced POV. Difference is 32 tick for replays, and the server tickrate for your demo. When viewing a demo with console command: "playdemo example_demo" you view your demo, and with replays you see the server replay. Type in console: "demoui" to open up the demo ui. In both cases, the file name will appear at the top of the little ui. Right click CS:GO, go to properties, the local files, then browse local files. Then proceed to "csgo" here you will find your demos you recorded in the console beforehand. You can view these with the console. To find your replays, proceed to the "replays" folder. Remember how I said that the demo ui ingame shows the file name as well? Well, keep the replays folder open, start up CS:GO, go to WATCH, go to YOUR MATCHES, click the recent match you want, then DOWNLOAD the match you wish to see. Before I forget, go in windowed mode before or after the match is downloaded. Now, click WATCH ON GOTV (top right of the map background, near the trash). Did you keep both file explorer and CS:GO open at the same time? Alright, in CS:GO type in console: "demoui" look at that file name... Delicious. Ok, in file explorer, in the replays folder. Use shortcut "ctrl + f" to find a file (unless its just the one game replay). look back at CS:GO while its windowed. Look at the file name at the top of the demo ui. Should be match730_##############_##########_###.demo (number variation or similar look may occur because myeah). Anyways look back at your file explorer, using the shortcut from earlier, start typing in the first digit that seems to VARY from the REST. Example. I have FOUR files starting with match730_00326# (# <-- different number) search for the different number, and start typing that in instead of "match730" every time. You should quickly find your demo you have been looking for. Congrats! You have now accessed your DEMO file you have been looking for from replays. You can now upload your file to, wherever you want, and view it as, well, a CS:GO demo, but from anyone's POV.

TL;DR

jesus..
facebook.com/KarazyGaming 12 ENE 2020 a las 1:43 a. m. 
Read the thread but only two solutions came up to convert the .dem files either use a codec and do the following steps mentioned and or place the file under a video editing software. Thing is I downloaded Movavi and I apparently had a copy of the WMM software but I can't seem to put the files on there. Does anyone have any solutions on that?
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Publicado el: 31 ENE 2014 a las 5:51 p. m.
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