How to Silently Install OBS Studio

Silent install · · 6 min read

For Intune, SCCM, or PDQ deployments, OBS Studio can be rolled out cleanly as a machine-wide EXE install when you use the verified silent install command and run with admin rights. This guide is built for IT admins who need a practical, repeatable method to package, deploy, and validate OBS Studio from OBS Project, including detection rule considerations so devices report accurately and the installation stays consistent across managed Windows endpoints.

STEP 0

Quick snapshot: Silently install OBS Studio on Windows

Run in an elevated Command Prompt or PowerShell:

cmd
OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe /S

Overview

ApplicationOBS Studio
Version32.1.2
PublisherOBS Project
Installer typeNSIS or EXE
Install scopeSystem / machine-wide
Requires adminYes
Silent installAvailable
Silent uninstallAvailable
Detection methodRegistry
Installer fileOBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe
DownloadOBS Studio installer

Silent install steps

Run any one of the methods below to install OBS Studio silently with zero user interaction. Command Prompt and PowerShell produce the same result — use whichever fits your deployment workflow.

Method 1: Install with Command Prompt

  1. Download or stage the installer (OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe) to a local folder, for example C:\Installers.
Installers
This PCLocal Disk (C:)InstallersSearch Installers
OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe6/17/2026 9:14 AMApplication
1 item1 item selected
  1. Open Command Prompt as Administrator:
    Press StartType cmdRight-click Command PromptChoose Run as administrator
AllAppsDocumentsSettingsFoldersPhotos
Best match
Command PromptSystem
Command Prompt
System
Open
Run as administrator
Run as different user
Open file location
cmd
  1. Switch to the installer folder, then run the silent install command:
cmd
OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe /S

Method 2: Install with PowerShell

Run the same silent install through PowerShell (elevated).

  1. Download or stage the installer (OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe) to a local folder, for example C:\Installers.
  1. Open PowerShell as Administrator — right-click Start (or press Win+X), then:
    • On Windows 10: choose Windows PowerShell (Admin).
    • On Windows 11: choose Terminal (Admin) — it opens Windows Terminal running PowerShell.
Right-click the Start button — or press ⊞ Win + X
Apps and Features
Power Options
Device Manager
Disk Management
Terminal
Terminal (Admin)
Task Manager
Settings
  1. Run the command:
powershell
Start-Process -FilePath OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe -ArgumentList '/S' -Wait

Deployment Notes

Key facts to confirm before rolling this out to production machines — permissions required, scope of install, and reboot behavior.

RequirementAdministrator privileges required
Install scopeMachine
Restart behaviorNo restart expected

Detection Rules

Configure your deployment tool with the detection rule below to confirm a successful install of OBS Studio. The same rule work for Microsoft Intune, SCCM, PDQ Deploy, and most RMM platforms — just paste the values into the matching fields.

Registry detection

Key pathHKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\OBS Studio
Value nameDisplayVersion
Expected version32.1.2

PowerShell detection script

Prefer a script-based check? Use this as a custom detection script in Microsoft Intune (or any tool that supports detection scripts). It exits 0 when OBS Studio is detected and 1 otherwise.

powershell
$Key = 'HKLM:\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\OBS Studio'
$Value = (Get-ItemProperty -Path $Key -Name 'DisplayVersion' -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue).'DisplayVersion'
if ($Value -eq '32.1.2') { exit 0 }
exit 1

Silent Uninstall Steps

Remove OBS Studio silently from one machine or your entire fleet. The commands below uninstall without prompts and suppress automatic reboots so you control the timing.

Method 1: Uninstall with Command Prompt

Run the uninstall command from an elevated Command Prompt.

  1. Open Command Prompt as Administrator.
  2. Run the silent uninstall command.
cmd
"%ProgramFiles%\obs-studio\uninstall.exe" /S

Method 2: Uninstall with PowerShell

Run the same silent uninstall command through PowerShell.

  1. Open PowerShell as Administrator.
  2. Run the silent uninstall command.
powershell
Start-Process -FilePath "%ProgramFiles%\obs-studio\uninstall.exe" -ArgumentList '/S' -Wait

Deployment Examples

Drop one of the snippets below into your deployment tool, Group Policy, or scheduled task. Each script wraps the silent install command for OBS Studio as a batch file or PowerShell script — copy, save, and run.

Batch file example

Save the following content as install-obs-studio.bat in the same folder as the installer.

cmd
@echo off
cd /d "%~dp0"
OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe /S
exit /b %errorlevel%

PowerShell script example

Save the following content as install-obs-studio.ps1 in the same folder as the installer.

powershell
Set-Location -Path $PSScriptRoot
$Installer = 'OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe'
& $Installer /S
exit $LASTEXITCODE

Frequently asked questions

Can I silently install OBS Studio on Windows?
Yes. This guide uses NSIS or EXE switches to install OBS Studio 32.1.2 completely unattended, with no user interaction. These commands are commonly used with Intune, SCCM, PDQ Deploy, and RMM tools.
Do I need administrator privileges to install OBS Studio?
Yes. OBS Studio requires elevated permissions for installation. Run the installer as Administrator or deploy it using the SYSTEM context.
Will installing OBS Studio restart the computer?
No. The silent EXE installer for OBS Studio finishes without rebooting the device. Use the silent switch provided in the install command above.
How do I verify OBS Studio installed successfully?
To confirm OBS Studio installed correctly, use the detection rule from this guide — file path, registry key, MSI product code, or MSIX package family name — as commonly supported by Intune, SCCM, and PDQ.
How do I silently uninstall OBS Studio?
Silently remove OBS Studio by using the silent uninstall command provided in this guide.
Which deployment tools support these commands?
These OBS Studio commands are commonly used with Intune, SCCM/MECM, PDQ Deploy, ManageEngine, NinjaOne, Datto RMM, Atera, and Action1.

Troubleshooting

If the install fails, exits with a non-zero code, or leaves no trace on the target machine, work through the checks below. Most issues come down to permissions, paths, or exit code handling.

Run as administratorMake sure Command Prompt or PowerShell is opened as Administrator. This installer writes to a machine-wide location and will fail silently without elevated permissions.
Verify the installer file nameConfirm that the installer file name matches the command shown in this guide: OBSProject.OBSStudio.32.1.2.X64.exe.
Run from the correct folderRun the command from the folder that contains the installer file. For batch or PowerShell deployments, place the script and installer in the same folder.
Check exit codesIf the installer returns a non-zero exit code, review the installer log or your deployment tool's logs. Some packages use additional success exit codes.
Restart if requiredIf the application does not appear immediately after installation, sign out and sign back in, or restart the device — this refreshes Start menu shortcuts, file associations, and Path entries written by the installer.
Validate detection rulesIf your deployment tool reports the app as not installed, verify that the detection rule matches the installed version, MSI product code, registry key, or file path. Use the Detection Rules section above to confirm whether the application was installed successfully.

Deployment recap

Before you roll OBS Studio out to production, confirm you have:

  • The silent install command, run from an elevated prompt
  • The matching silent uninstall command for rollback
  • The detection rule wired into your deployment tool

Got all three? You’re ready to deploy at scale. If this guide saved you time, fuel the next one:

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