: The overlay was known to be blocked by BattleEye and CS:GO’s Trusted Mode.
For those running their own Murmur (the Mumble server), 1.3.4 delivers:
: Users reported that images could not be pasted directly into the channel chat box in this version. mumble 1.3.4
By the time 1.3.4 arrived, the Opus codec was the undisputed king of VoIP audio. Mumble 1.3.4 ensured that Opus was the default and most optimized codec available. It offers ultra-low latency combined with variable bitrate encoding.
Third, the release demonstrates how mature open-source projects balance stability with incremental modernization. Mumble 1.3.4 did not reinvent the interface or chase trendy features like built-in video streaming. Instead, it focused on accessibility improvements (screen reader support on Windows), better overlay rendering for DirectX 11 games, and fixes for the Qt5 interface on macOS. This conservatism is a strength: system administrators can deploy 1.3.4 knowing that behavior remains predictable, configuration files backward-compatible, and resource usage lean. For users on older hardware or limited bandwidth, Mumble’s ability to run on a Raspberry Pi server with dozens of concurrent clients is a testament to its efficient engineering. : The overlay was known to be blocked
The official mumblevoip/mumble-server:1.3.4 image is available on Docker Hub:
: Users have noted that version 1.3.4 often provided superior sound quality compared to early 1.4 builds, particularly regarding echo cancellation and codec performance The "Broken" Upgrade Path Mumble 1
: Users can right-click and adjust the volume of individual participants in a channel.