VideoClock prevents audio
drift so that it won't gradually go out of sync by the time you get to the end of a long video. (e.g. 2 hour movie)
If there is a processing delay between your audio or video, it won't do anything to correct for that.
You need to set up an A/V Sync Correction in the JRiver video options.
I recommend shifting it by plus or minus 33ms until you get the correction in the right ballpark.
Usually if there is a sync problem, the issue is that video is appearing behind audio, but that's not always the case. It really depends on your audio/video hardware.
So I just got JRiver Media Center to work with Games as a WDM driver. The only issue I have at the moment is the "delay" in audio. Everytime I cast something in game, there's like a 1sec delay of Audio?
Is this JRiver always this slow?
That depends on your audio hardware.
Using the NVIDIA HDMI device on my system, I can set the buffers small enough that audio is in sync with browser-based video playback.
I haven't tried it with games though.