Open your Browser (I use Chrome) then open “Sound Mixer Options on Windows” and set the Output to CABLE INPUT (Virtual Audio Cable).Open Control Panel>Hardware and Sounds>Sound and set Voicemeeter to Default Recording and Playback Device.Install Virtual Audio Cable (run the installer as an Administrator) & Restart.Install Voicemeeter (run the installer as an Administrator) & Restart.These tools are donationware, so anyone can get up and running with them for little to no cost. The solution I landed on was to use Voicemeeter and Virtual Audio Cables from VB-Audio Software. This set-up will work if you just play on Discord with audio and a dice roller like SavageBot. Craig records the Discord audio channel but not the system sounds, and I wanted both in the mix. In addition, SoundPad lets you do some fun on the fly mixing that would be harder (but not impossible) with Jukebox.Īdditionally, sometimes we record our games using the Craig Discord bot. So I wanted to be able to push the sound through the main audio channel for our game. However, like many people we use Discord for audio and Roll20 for rolling dice, dealing cards, and moving tokens. Jukebox plays through the Roll20 environment in the browser. You can learn about Jukebox on Roll20s wiki: It’s a great tool for adding audio to your games and I recommend it. Roll20 has a great Jukebox feature that can do playlists and pull directly from Tabletop Audio. Turns out it wasn’t that hard but there were a few missing steps from the various internet tutorials I was using. So, like a good friend and nerd, I worked on it for hours. It was an experiment on my part after a friend of mine asked me if I could figure out how to do it. In my last post I mentioned using TableTop Audio’s new SoundPad feature to play ambient sounds and effects in our game.
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