EzClap automates the full pipeline from Twitch clip to YouTube Shorts. Connect your Twitch account, format clips for vertical video, add captions, and let StreamSync publish automatically after every stream. No manual downloading, no re-uploading, no scheduling each clip individually — the workflow runs on its own once it's set up.
Log in with Twitch — EzClap pulls your clips directly from the Twitch API. Every clip you create during a stream appears in your EzClap dashboard automatically, organized by date and stream. No manual downloading or uploading required.
Twitch clips are 16:9. YouTube Shorts require 9:16. The Clip Wizard is a visual layout editor where you position your gameplay, facecam, and any branding elements in vertical format. Save it as a template — it applies to every clip you process from that point. You do this setup once, not per clip.
Run auto-captions on your highlight clips, review the transcript, and style the text the way you want. Then pin your best clips to the Spotlight Queue and arrange them in the order you want them to post. The queue drains clip by clip as StreamSync publishes.
StreamSync monitors your Twitch activity. When your stream ends, it waits for the delay you configure (e.g., 30 minutes post-stream), then publishes the next clip from your Spotlight Queue to YouTube Shorts and TikTok. No action needed from you — it just runs.
StreamSync is tied to your actual streaming activity. It watches Twitch (via your login) and optionally Discord (via a one-time bot invite) or Google Calendar (read-only import) to know when you've streamed. When a stream ends, StreamSync fires after a configurable delay and publishes the next clip from your queue to YouTube Shorts and TikTok simultaneously. On days you don't stream, it stays quiet — no accidental posts on non-stream days.
If you want to maintain a posting cadence independent of your stream schedule, DailyDrop lets you define which days of the week and what time to post. It pulls from the same Spotlight Queue and publishes to the same platforms. Useful for off-stream content days or when you want to spread out publishing across the week.
StreamSync and DailyDrop are complementary. A common setup: StreamSync fires after each stream to push the freshest highlight, while DailyDrop covers Tuesday and Thursday when you don't stream but want to keep posting. Both draw from the same queue, so you maintain one list and both modes work through it.
EzClap uses real stream data — not a guessed schedule — to decide when to publish. Here is how the sync works:
Your Twitch login is all EzClap needs to detect stream activity. No additional setup. EzClap reads your Twitch stream history to know when you went live and when your stream ended.
If you post stream announcements in Discord, invite the EzClap bot to your server once. It reads your scheduled events and can sync that schedule into EzClap — useful if your stream times are planned ahead in Discord before they show up on Twitch.
If you plan your stream schedule in Google Calendar, EzClap can import those events. This is a one-way read — EzClap reads your events but never writes to your calendar. Good for streamers who coordinate streams across multiple people or maintain detailed content calendars.
Here is the full list of what EzClap connects to and what each connection does:
Used for login and clip import. EzClap reads your Twitch clips via OAuth — standard Twitch login, no third-party passwords stored.
Connect your YouTube account to enable publishing to YouTube Shorts. EzClap uses the YouTube Data API to upload videos to your channel. You authorize it once through the standard Google OAuth flow.
Connect TikTok if you want to publish there alongside YouTube Shorts. Both platforms receive the clip in the same publish run — you don't run separate jobs.
Invite the EzClap bot to your Discord server if you want to sync stream events from your server's scheduled events. Also enables optional Discord notifications when clips publish.
Connect Twitch and YouTube in EzClap, build a vertical layout template, add clips to your Spotlight Queue, and enable StreamSync. After each stream ends, StreamSync publishes the next queued clip to YouTube Shorts automatically. One-time setup, then it runs on its own.
No. The Clip Wizard handles the 16:9 to 9:16 conversion. You set up a layout template once, and it applies automatically to every clip you process.
Yes. EzClap publishes to both platforms in a single run — no separate jobs, no duplicate queues.
StreamSync only fires on days you actually streamed — so irregular schedules are handled automatically. DailyDrop fills in gaps with a fixed posting schedule on days of your choosing.
EzClap reads your Twitch stream activity directly via your Twitch login. You can also optionally connect Discord events or Google Calendar for more precise schedule data.
Free to start. Connect with Twitch and set up your first publish run today.
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