Set it once. VOD clips post themselves.

An AI agent that watches Twitch streamers and auto-publishes the top stream clips for you.

LumiClip's Twitch automation agent watches up to ten streamers of your choice, detects every new VOD after the broadcast ends, runs each archive through the AI clipping pipeline, brands the top 3 clips with your template, and stagger-schedules them to your connected TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook accounts — without you scrubbing through hours of stream footage.

Long video turned into vertical short clips

SEEN ON TIKTOK, REELS & SHORTS

+100K Clips Generated

Every clip below was generated by LumiClip and posted by creators like you — no edits, no retouching.

The 8-hour VOD problem

Scrubbing through 8-hour streams for highlights is a job.

If you clip Twitch streams — your own VODs, your guests', the streamers you cover — you already know the math. Every broadcast is six to ten hours of raw footage to scrub through for the two or three moments that actually clip. Captioning, reframing the gameplay capture to vertical, branding, scheduling. Per stream, per night, per channel you watch. Miss a stream and the highlight gets stale before you ship it.

LumiClip's automation agent removes the loop. You pick the Twitch streamers worth clipping, pick a brand template once, connect the social accounts you publish to, and the agent does the rest: detect the VOD after the stream ends, find the highlight moments, reframe gameplay to 9:16, bake in your captions and hook, stagger-publish to every connected platform. You see a recap email when clips are scheduled and a full log of every VOD the agent processed.

Why streamers run an automation agent

Three reasons hands-off VOD clipping wins

The agent is the only LumiClip surface where you don't need to scrub, watch, or approve to ship a Twitch clip.

Top 3 VOD highlights — no scrubbing

For each new VOD the agent finds the three highest-scoring moments — chat reactions, gameplay peaks, unexpected one-liners — using the same highlight ranker the manual flow uses. You skip the 8-hour scrub and ship clips while the stream's still trending.

Gameplay reframed to 9:16 with webcam protected

Twitch streams are typically 16:9 with the streamer webcam in the corner. The reframer detects the webcam region and protects it across the 9:16 crop so your face stays in frame for the vertical clip. Same active-speaker tracking the YouTube pipeline uses, tuned for gameplay capture.

VOD-trigger detection — clip before the moment dies

The watcher polls Twitch every two hours for newly-archived VODs. Most stream highlights are clipped, exported, and scheduled within hours of the broadcast ending — while the moment is still in the timeline and the conversation around it is hot.

How it works

Four steps. The agent handles the rest.

Five minutes of setup; weeks of zero-touch stream clipping.

  1. Pick the Twitch streamers to watch

    Add up to ten streamers — your own channel, your guests', the gameplay creators you re-cut, the IRL streamers you cover. Paste a Twitch handle; the agent resolves it to a stable user ID once and never re-checks.

  2. Connect socials and pick a brand template

    Connect the social accounts you want stream clips published to — TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook. Pick one of your brand templates (or let the agent auto-create a Hormozi-style default) so every clip exports with consistent captions, hook, and logo.

  3. The agent detects new VODs automatically

    Every two hours the watcher polls each streamer for new VODs (live streams are skipped until the broadcast ends and Twitch archives the recording), dedupes against what it's already seen, and triggers the full clipping pipeline on anything new — within reasonable duration limits.

  4. Top 3 clips publish on a stagger

    Highest-scoring stream moments export with the brand template, then schedule one hour after detection and every two hours after — across every connected account. You can switch to Drafts-only mode any time and publish manually from the Posts tab.

What the agent does

The Twitch repurposing pipeline, end to end

Every step from VOD detection to scheduled post is handled by the agent — no manual approval steps unless you switch on drafts mode.

Twitch VOD watcher

Polls every two hours, dedupes against an internal log so a VOD is never processed twice, and skips ongoing live streams (only the archived recording is eligible). Multi-day marathon VODs over the duration cap are skipped with a clear log line.

Top 3 stream highlight ranking

Same AI ranker the manual Twitch flow uses — chat-velocity peaks, audio energy, transcript-quote density. The agent picks the three highest-scoring moments per VOD and exports them with your captions preset, AI hook, and logo baked in.

Gameplay-aware reframing

Twitch sources are typically gameplay capture with a webcam corner. The reframer detects the webcam region and protects it inside the 9:16 crop so the streamer's face stays visible in vertical. Works for IRL, just-chatting, gaming, and music streams alike.

Stagger-scheduled multi-platform posting

First clip is scheduled one hour after detection, then one every two hours per connected account. Posts go to TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn via PostForMe with platform-correct captions, titles, and hashtags.

What you get

Stream, sleep, ship clips.

The practical outcomes of running a VOD clipping agent vs. scrubbing every broadcast by hand.

0
Hours scrubbed per VOD

Watching, scrubbing, picking, captioning, reframing, branding, scheduling — the agent does all of it after the stream ends. You see results in your email when posts are scheduled.

Top 3
Stream moments, branded

The agent ships exactly three clips per VOD — the three highest-scoring moments — with your brand template baked in. Highlights make it to feed while the conversation around them is still live.

Every
Connected social, on a stagger

TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook — every connected account gets the stream clips on a 1 + 2 + 2 hour cadence, not a burst that the algorithm flags as spam.

Feature-by-feature

Everything the Twitch agent ships out of the box

The details that decide whether stream automation feels reliable or feels like a black box.

Up to 10 watched streamers per workflow

Mix your own channel, friends' channels, and creators you re-cut. Cap exists to keep API quota predictable; rarely a binding constraint.

VOD-only — no live broadcast clipping

The agent waits for the broadcast to end and Twitch to archive the recording. Live streams in progress are skipped and re-evaluated on the next tick once the VOD lands.

Webcam-region detection for vertical reframes

The reframer detects the streamer's webcam corner and protects it inside the 9:16 crop so the face stays in frame — even when the gameplay action moves across the source.

Per-workflow and per-user daily caps

Max 3 VODs per workflow per day and 5 per user per day so a marathon-stream day can't drain your credit balance overnight. Caps reset on a rolling 24-hour window.

Auto-pause on low credits

Three consecutive skipped VODs due to low balance auto-pauses the workflow. You get an email; the agent stops polling until you top up and resume.

Per-platform caption builder

YouTube gets a title and description with hashtags; TikTok, Instagram, Facebook get a single caption with hashtags inline. No platform sees the wrong field.

Recap email when clips are scheduled

One email per processed VOD with the stream title, the number of clips scheduled, and a link to the Automation tab. Override anything before it goes live.

Full processed-VOD log

Every detected VOD, every skip reason, every scheduled post is logged on the Automation tab. Inspect why a particular VOD didn't ship without digging into a CRM.

Twitch automation agent FAQ

It watches the Twitch streamers you pick, detects every new VOD after the broadcast ends, runs the recording through LumiClip's AI clipping pipeline, picks the three highest-scoring moments, exports them with your brand template baked in, and stagger-schedules them to your connected TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook accounts. You get a recap email when clips are scheduled.
No — the agent waits for the broadcast to end and Twitch to archive the VOD. Live streams in progress are skipped and re-evaluated on the next polling tick once the archived VOD becomes available, typically within minutes of the stream ending.
The reframer detects the streamer's webcam region on the source and protects it inside the 9:16 vertical crop so the face stays visible in the clip. Works for the typical Twitch layout — game capture with a webcam in the lower-left or lower-right corner — and also for just-chatting / IRL streams where the streamer fills more of the frame.
Up to ten Twitch streamers per workflow. For each new VOD the agent ships exactly three clips — the three highest-scoring moments per the same ranker the manual flow uses. Per-workflow (3 VODs/day) and per-user (5 VODs/day) caps keep the credit cost predictable on marathon-stream days.
Schedule mode (default) auto-publishes the top three clips on a stagger — one hour after VOD detection, then every two hours per platform. Drafts mode does everything except publish — clips export with the brand template and land in the Posts tab as drafts so you can review captions, swap thumbnails, or move the schedule before going live.
Yes — the agent skips VODs under 5 minutes (too short for a quotable moment) and over 4 hours (multi-day stream archives that typically need manual trimming first). Most regular Twitch streams between 30 minutes and 4 hours are fair game; longer marathon broadcasts can be clipped manually.
The automation agent is part of the Pro plan. You need a connected social account and enough credits (100 credits/month minimum) for the watcher to actually fire — Pro plans include the volume you need for sustained stream watching across multiple streamers.

Set up your Twitch automation agent — free to try

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