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Streamlabs’ Collab Cam makes it easy for streamers to collaborate.
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(Pocket-lint) – Streamlabs is constantly innovating to improve the experience for streamers and content creators. Today, Collab Cam makes it easier for streamers to work together.
For those unaware, Streamlabs is a tool that allows users to capture gameplay footage and stream it to audiences on Twitch, YouTube, and elsewhere.
But it’s so much more powerful than that, because Streamlabs gives users access to all sorts of things, including bots to help moderate comments, alert boxes to highlight special events on the stream, overlays flows and much more.
Streamlabs realized that people are spending more and more time collaborating with other streamers or creating multi-person streams for podcasts and the like. This type of collaboration is usually difficult to set up, as you have to use Zoom, Discord or another source and then try to integrate it with the streaming software. With Collab Cam, these difficulties are now a thing of the past.
Streamlabs’ Collab Cam was unveiled in beta at TwitchCon Amerstam in July, but is now more widely available.
The way it works makes it not only simpler than other methods you might be using, but also more powerful.
To get started with Collab Cam, all you have to do is create a new source and select the Collab Cam option. You will then have access to a dedicated link that you can share with your friend. That person can then visit the link in a browser to share their camera with you.
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Collab Cam then makes it easy to host the other person as a guest, which is perfect for podcasts and the like. According to the Streamlabs team, streamers also have the option to choose the link in their Streamlabs and co-stream on their own machine.
Collab Cam promises to be higher quality than other sources you might use and offers the ability to include up to four people at a time. You can only host one person for free, but if you host more than one, you will have to pay.
Collab Cam has other uses too, since you can set it up with your own phone and use it as a multi-camera option to show off your mouse hand or something else while streaming.
Written by Adrian Willings.