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Sizzle Blog

How Sizzle.gg is Helping Both Small Streamers and Esports Leagues

Small streamers and esports leagues each have their own unique challenges, particularly when they’re just starting out. It’s an incredibly competitive and over-saturated market, so one of the most important things to get ahead is by trying to find and then having some kind of leg-up or advantage over the competition. Often this is easier said than done.

First we should cover some of the procedural work and investment involved for both small streamers and esports leagues. While game capture on PC and Mac is not too difficult, as both OS do come with basic free software for this purpose (although neither are particularly professional quality), game capture on consoles is often much more difficult, and a compatible capture card will have to be used to connect the equipment and devices up to record the game footage. Other audio visual equipment is also necessary so that viewers can see both the game play and also the streamer or esports player.

Whether it’s a game stream or an esports match, most of the time the video will be about 3 – 6 hours long. For the average small streamer, Twitch is an excellent option for game streaming, but on YouTube often the algorithm doesn’t reward videos that length, and tends to give much higher preference to videos that are less than 30 minutes. Of course this means that the streams will have to be edited down to fit with that standard, and so it naturally encourages that editing process to gravitate towards creating highlights. Because if you’re going to cut down the content from 6 hours to just 15 minutes it’s only reasonable that you’re going to just leave only the best parts in. 

There is a YouTube stream clipper built into YouTube by default. It’s pretty simple, but it gets the job done. You just need to insert a stream marker when something exciting, funny, or interesting in some way happens while you’re streaming, that way you can easily find when that moment happened. Then when editing you cut the video down to just those clips. The strength of the YouTube stream clipper is that it’s free and relatively easy to use, but the major weakness is that it’s a very manual process because you have to manually add the stream marker, and you still have to manually edit the videos. For small streamers that alone can easily be 40+ hours of footage per week, and this is even more extreme for esports leagues because there will be multiple matches between players and teams across the league during one esports event. This could be thousands of hours of footage to edit. This can be extremely time consuming and expensive.


YouTube Stream Clipper

With that in mind, we are excited to introduce you to Sizzle.gg, which generates highlights of the best moments in a gaming stream, allowing streamers and leagues to edit footage on the spot. The best part of their solution to the struggles for both small streamers and esports leagues is that it requires absolutely no software at all, which removes the frustration of researching which software is best to use, the cost of paying (which is especially beneficial for small-scale streamers that are just starting out and are on a tight budget), the time necessary to learn how to use it, and the energy consuming and often frustrating experience that is editing videos.

Sizzle.gg uses innovative AI technology to analyze the most action-packed segments of the stream to automatically create the best streamer highlights. Of course, this is a great benefit not just for the streamer, but for the viewers as well because it cuts down the thousands of hours of content from their favorite streamers by removing the less important and less interesting “filler” and leaving just the best highlights, so the viewers don’t miss any of the good stuff, but also don’t have to spend an entire day just to get caught up.

One excellent feature is that there is absolutely no loss of advertising revenue, because each Sizzle.gg stream highlight is embedded directly from the original YouTube or Twitch stream, which means that even though the viewers are watching through Sizzle.gg it still counts the clicks and views! This is especially important for esports leagues because all social shares are essentially just pointers to moments within the original broadcast, meaning that only those viewers with legitimate access (e.g. subscribers) will be able to see those highlights.

Sizzle.gg Dashboard

Sizzle.gg has a lot of personalizable features that can also be used to create daily or weekly updates to fans that focus on their own personal favorite players, and can create a cool sign-in experience without having to have the videos hosted on another site, as the videos are still within Twitch or YouTube. In addition, Sizzle’s services allow viewers a deeply immersive and personalized experience because it gives the control to them to pick what kind of highlights they want to see, as they can search for specifically the funniest or most exciting moments according to their own preference or taste. That is to say that you can easily create multiple highlight videos from just one stream, with a focus on one type of entertaining theme or another. That way the viewers have as much choice and control as possible, while the streamer or esports league have nothing to lose and everything to gain! It’s a win-win scenario!

Sizzle.gg is compatible with all the most popular streaming and esports games, including but not limited to League of Legends, VALORANT, Fortnite, Apex Legends, Call of Duty: Warzone 2.0, and Overwatch 2, and plans are currently in motion to continue adding more games to that roster. Considering that Sizzle.gg is currently free for a limited time while in the beta stage, you really don’t have any reason not to give it a try. Head over to Sizzle.gg today to get started, we know you won’t be disappointed! Create an account on Sizzle.gg today!
If you are a current or potentially a future user, they really want to hear your questions and feedback. The best way to reach them is through their official Discord, Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.