Verdict
Head-to-head · Best Capture Cards for Streaming

AVerMedia Live Gamer 4K (GC573) vs Elgato HD60 X

Which is the better buy? Side-by-side on rating, price, strengths, and watch-outs — with the published ratings we averaged to get there.

The short answer

Elgato HD60 X comes out ahead by a narrow margin (4.3 vs 4.5). The gap is mostly about Console streamers who output at 1080p and want the simplest, most reliable plug-and-play capture box with great software. — read the strengths below before deciding.

AVerMedia Live Gamer 4K (GC573)
Ranked #4 in Best Capture Cards for Streaming
AVerMedia Live Gamer 4K (GC573)
$159.99as of Jun 7

The AVerMedia Live Gamer 4K (GC573) is the internal-card pick, delivering 4K60 HDR10 capture and high-frame-rate 1440p144/1080p240 modes from a PCIe slot. Reviewers praise its low latency and superb footage, and it often undercuts Elgato's internal 4K60 Pro. The catch is a documented PCIe-bandwidth quirk that can cap capture near 55fps on some setups, so slot placement matters.

Strengths
  • 4K60 HDR10 capture and passthrough as an internal PCIe card
  • Supports high-frame-rate 1440p144 and 1080p240 capture
  • Very low latency capture with playable preview window
Watch-outs
  • PCIe x4 bandwidth quirk can cap capture near 55fps on some boards
  • Passthrough latency too high to game on the return signal
  • Best 4K/HDR/high-fps recording historically favored NVIDIA GPUs
Elgato HD60 X
Higher ratedRanked #3 in Best Capture Cards for Streaming
Elgato HD60 X
$138.84as of Jun 7

The Elgato HD60 X is the safe, beginner-friendly external card that pairs reliable 1080p60 capture with 4K60 HDR and 1440p120 VRR passthrough. Reviewers consistently praise it as the easiest plug-and-play option with the most polished software, ideal for console streamers who output at 1080p. It is fundamentally a 1080p capture card, so creators who actually need 4K recording should step up.

Strengths
  • 4K60 HDR10 passthrough with 1440p120 and VRR for modern consoles
  • Reliable, high-quality 1080p60 capture for streaming
  • External plug-and-play box that works without a PC case
Watch-outs
  • Capture maxes out at 1080p60 (or 4K30), not 4K60
  • No HDMI 2.1, so no 4K120 with VRR passthrough on Xbox
  • HDR works on passthrough but not on 4K recording

How they stack up

AVerMedia Live Gamer 4K (GC573)

The GC573 is the only internal PCIe card here, capturing 4K60 like the AVerMedia Live Gamer Ultra S (GC553Pro) but inside the case. It lacks the 4K144 ceiling of the Elgato 4K X and the plug-and-play ease of the external Elgato HD60 X, and its passthrough latency is worse than those external boxes.

Elgato HD60 X

The HD60 X is the easiest external card to live with but caps capture at 1080p60, where the AVerMedia Live Gamer Ultra S (GC553Pro) captures full 4K60 for a similar price. It shares Elgato software with the 4K X but lacks that card's HDMI 2.1 and 4K144 ceiling, and unlike the internal AVerMedia Live Gamer 4K (GC573) it needs no PCIe slot.

Specs side-by-side

SpecAVerMedia Live Gamer 4K (GC573)Elgato HD60 X
Max Capture4K60 HDR10 (1440p144 / 1080p240)1080p60 (or 4K30) HDR10
Passthrough4K60 HDR10, 1440p144, 1080p2404K60 HDR10, 1440p120, VRR
InterfacePCIe x4 (internal)USB 3.0 (USB-C)
HDMIHDMI 2.0 in / outHDMI 2.0
HDRHDR10 capture + passthroughPassthrough + 1080p60 HDR10 capture
CompatibilityDesktop PC (PCIe slot required)PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Switch, PC
Form FactorInternal add-in cardExternal
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