Twitch and gaming-flavored clip mining for streamers and esports shows.
Twitch and gaming streamers
Eklipse is the rare clip tool that actually understands gaming context — it knows what a clutch, a kill, or a level-up looks like across 1000+ titles instead of just chasing audio spikes. If you're not a streamer playing FPS or battle royale, it's the wrong product. For Valorant or Fortnite creators, it's borderline mandatory.
Eklipse is an AI clip generator built specifically for gaming content. It connects directly to your Twitch, Kick, or YouTube channel and analyzes streams for highlight-worthy moments — kills, wins, reactions, chat spikes — then exports clips formatted for TikTok, Reels, and Shorts. What separates it from generic clippers is that its detection model is trained on over 1,000 game titles, which means it understands the context of an action in Valorant, Call of Duty, Apex Legends, or Fortnite rather than just looking at audio amplitude or visual motion. The free plan caps you at 720p, 15 clips per stream, and 14-day storage, which is genuinely workable for casual streamers. Premium runs around $179.99/year (about $14.99/month effective) and unlocks 1080p60 exports, 10x faster processing, priority queues, and advanced templates. The typical streamer workflow is connect the channel, let detection run after a session, spend 15 minutes triaging clips, and queue posts to TikTok the same night. Where Eklipse falls down: it's heavily optimized for fast-paced FPS and battle royale games, so detection quality drops noticeably for strategy, MMO, or chill creative streams. It's also genuinely useless for non-gaming content — don't try to push a podcast through it. The mobile apps cover review and posting but most heavy editing still happens on the web. For its target user, it's one of the best vertical-specific clippers on the market. For anyone else, irrelevant.
The most-marketed AI clip generator, decent at picking moments and resizing to vertical.
AI clip generator that emphasizes attention-grabbing edits across many languages.
Open-source Python toolkit for programmatic clip extraction.
Twitch and gaming-flavored clip mining for streamers and esports shows.
Eklipse is shaped for twitch and gaming streamers. Its biggest strength: game-aware highlight detection across 1000+ titles. If you're not a streamer playing FPS or battle royale, it's the wrong product
worse detection for non-fps or slower games; premium needed for 1080p60 exports. None of these are deal-breakers on their own, but they're worth knowing before you commit.
There's a free tier, and you can ship work on it before deciding to upgrade. Confirm what's included on their site.
Closest in the same category: Opus Clip, Spikes Studio, ClipsAI. Each has its own shape — see the alternatives page for a side-by-side.