Categories: TwitchTV

Twitch Unveils ‘IRL’ Category For Vlog-Like Content, Will Enable Mobile Broadcasting In 2017

Streaming platform Twitch announced today that it’s moving further beyond its origins as a gaming destination to enable users to share more facets of their daily lives. A new content category launching today titled IRL will encourage creators to express their thoughts, opinions, and feelings on non-gaming-related topics, the company announced in a blog post, via both live and prerecorded videos.

“Like a vlog,” wrote Twitch marketing exec Annie Berrones — citing a medium that has become synonymous with YouTube — “you can now interact with your audience in a one-to-many style, live or recorded, even when not playing a game.” Facebook has also taken great pains in recent months to encourage its users to create live, vlog-like streams. Twitch says its goal is to help creators forge a more personal relationship with their viewers. The company envisions creators using the IRL hub to discuss hobbies, books, TV shows, trips, and even as a means of chronicling daily errands.

Check out an announcement video right here:

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe


At the same time and in a similar vein, Twitch announced today that it will launch native streaming from the Twitch app beginning in 2017. Currently, streams cannot be initiated from mobile devices. “When mobile broadcasting launches, it will default to the IRL category,” Berrones explained, noting that mobile streaming will naturally lend itself to vlog-like content. At launch, Twitch says that users will not be able to stream mobile games.

Interested parties can sign up for a beta program right here.

Twitch, which was purchased by Amazon for roughly $1 billion in 2014, said its Community Guidelines initially only allowed gaming content, but then gradually expanded to include music creators, artists, eating, and other categories based on user feedback. Today, these guidelines have changed. “Starting now, we are removing all restrictions on non-endemic content,” Berrones announced — meaning that any content is now welcome as long as it is categorized appropriately.

Share
Published by
Geoff Weiss

Recent Posts

Millionaires: Giulia Amato on faith, finding her niche, and getting up at 4 a.m.

Welcome to Millionaires, where we profile creators who have recently crossed the one million follower…

3 hours ago

Creators on the Rise: Celestial Sylvia reads the danger all around us

Welcome to Creators on the Rise, where we find and profile breakout creators who are…

22 hours ago

TikTok, UMG re-up licensing agreement, bringing artists like Bad Bunny back to the app

TikTok and Universal Music Group (UMG) have settled their dispute. The two parties have agreed on a…

23 hours ago

TikTok is bringing “tentpole moments” to its premium ad product Pulse Premiere

Amidst political turmoil in the U.S. and abroad, TikTok addressed brand and agency representatives at the 2024 NewFronts.…

1 day ago

With 500,000 sellers in the U.S. alone, TikTok touts the safety features of its Shop

Amidst a chaotic week at TikTok, the app took some time to acknowledge its growing community…

2 days ago

Wesley Wang’s viral short film got 4.4 million views. A feature adaptation is in the works.

Nothing, Except Everything is getting a big-screen treatment. That's the name of a short film that…

2 days ago