Never Miss a Favorite Creator's Live Stream Again
Updated 2026-04-20
Live broadcasts disappear the moment the stream ends. If you missed it, you missed it — unless you were already recording. Here's how automatic cloud recording closes that gap so you never miss a favorite creator's live again.
Why missing a stream is so common
Live streams overwhelmingly happen during the streamer's own waking hours, which often does not line up with yours. Time-zone mismatches, work, sleep, and competing streams all conspire against the casual viewer. Even when you are awake and online, push notifications from streaming platforms get throttled, batched, or lost entirely depending on the app and OS settings. The result is that even dedicated fans miss most of the live content their favorite creators put out.
Some platforms keep a VOD copy for a while, but the rules vary widely. TikTok keeps live replays only for creators who opt in. Twitch deletes most VODs after 14 days (60 for subscribers and Partners). Bigo, Kick, and SOOPLIVE each have their own retention policies. Banking on the platform to hold the broadcast for you is a risky default.
What automatic cloud recording does
A cloud recorder watches the channels you follow. When one of them goes live, it captures the broadcast and saves it to your library — all in the background. You don't have to be online, you don't have to remember, and you don't have to keep your computer awake. The recording is waiting for you whenever you next open the app.
Getting started
New account registrations are currently closed while StreamRokuo prepares for wind-down. Existing users can still sign in, use the app, and review current pricing on the main page, or jump straight into a per-platform setup walkthrough: