![nes tetris nes tetris](https://assets-global.website-files.com/5e9fa1c7e4ed1f5e242e2313/600ddd1879b3da9df202279a_Tetris_5.jpg)
NestrisChamps provides a very simple timer that can be used in your OBS layout. That is waaayyy heavier than it needs to be.
![nes tetris nes tetris](https://meatfighter.com/nintendotetrisai/19.png)
Most players resort to finding a timer on the internet, and capture it with window capture in OBS. It is surprisingly annoying to find a very light timer to use. For those, it is typically expected that players will stream their qualification run while being stencil-ready, and include some custom timer in their OBS stream. Some competitions might not allow NestrisChamps for qualifiers. 2 hours) average_of=Y where Y can be one of 1, 2, or 3 (defaults to 3) ?minutes=60&average_of=2 minutes=X where X is the qualifier time (default to 120 minutes, i.e. The qualifier layout can be tuned with the following parameters, which can be added to the query string. The layout tracks scores from the moment it is loaded, and the timer starts as soon as the layout loads. Native webcam is active in this layout, so players can show their webcam capture works, if that is a requirement of the tournament they are joining. The layout is CTM-stencil-based, includes a built-in timer, and computes the qual score as the average of top X (3 by default). Most qualifiers have the same sort of requirements: stream for a specific amount of time, track your qual score, as either the highest score you can achieve during your qual session, or average of top 2, or top 3. Many online events have a qualifier format, where players must qualify to determine in which bracket they will play.