It's a shame that most x265 groups microsize the releases or use the x264 as source what results in low quality releases. And the few groups that do use the correct source suffer from it.
### Golden Rule
I created my own golden rule.
- 720/1080p => x264
- 2160p/4k => x265
#### How to accomplish the Golden Rule
- For Sonarr check [HERE](https://trash-guides.info/Sonarr/V3/Sonarr-Release-Profile-RegEx){:target="_blank"}
- For Radarr check [HERE](https://trash-guides.info/Radarr/V3/Collection-of-Custom-Formats-for-RadarrV3/#7201080p-no-x265){:target="_blank"}
[4k, transcoding, and you - aka the rules of 4k - a FAQ](https://forums.plex.tv/t/plex-4k-transcoding-and-you-aka-the-rules-of-4k-a-faq/378203){:target="_blank"} - Plex.tv
1. If you cannot direct play 4k, then perhaps you should not even be collecting 4k.
1. If you don’t have the storage space for a copy of both 4k and 1080/720, then perhaps you should not even be collecting 4k.
1. To avoid transcoding for remote and non-4k clients, keep your 4k content in separate plex libraries.
1. This may of course mean that you keep a 4k copy and a 1080/720 copy, but if you are collecting 4k content then you should not be worried about storage space, should you?