Live Hook LogoLive Hook
Open beta

Create automatic interactions for your live stream without relying on rigid widgets

Live Hook listens to Pix, chat, and live interactions, understands what you planned, and makes OBS respond at the right moment. Giveaways, alerts, and scenes happen without you leaving the game.

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Everything from the live
Signals
Rule actions
OBS
The reaction on screen
Instant

Event simulator

Click a trigger and watch the magic happen

The flow below shows a signal arriving from the live, Live Hook understanding your rule, and an OBS reaction happening right after.

Arrival

The signal appears

A viewer sends a R$ 10 Pix
The message says: muted
The signal arrives instantly
Live Hook Logo

Reading

Live Hook understands

Live Hook notices the amount
Finds the chosen word
Picks the right rule

Reaction

The live responds

The microphone is muted
The screen confirms the reaction
Then everything returns to normal
OBS microphoneLive

How it works

You create the rule. Live Hook makes the stream obey.

Think of it as a simple chain: something happens, Live Hook understands the intention, and OBS reacts as if someone were operating it behind the scenes.

Step 01
Live Hook listens to the stream
Pix, chat, and interactions arrive as signals. You do not need to jump between dashboards while you are live.
Step 02
It recognizes the agreement
Minimum amounts, keywords, or interaction types become simple conditions, almost like secret commands for your community.
Step 03
OBS reacts on stage
The scene changes, the microphone mutes, the alert appears, or the giveaway receives a new name without breaking your focus.

Problem vs solution

Traditional widgets trap your stream. Live Hook lets you create your own reactions.

Instead of memorizing dashboard after dashboard, you create simple combinations: if this happens live, do that in OBS. Live Hook handles the invisible path between both moments.

Before: everything scattered
Each tool has its own behavior, screen, limitation, and alert style.
  • You switch platforms and need to rebuild everything.
  • The live can repeat alerts when more than one source is open.
  • Amounts, keywords, and giveaways become hard to control.
After: one panel that understands the live
Live Hook listens to the important signals and turns each one into a reliable reaction.
  • Pix, chat, and alerts enter the same visual flow.
  • Your rules stay yours, even when your platform changes.
  • The reaction happens quickly, without you hunting for buttons.

Real use cases

Automations built around how streamers actually operate

Use cases designed for real streams: monetization, chat participation, and surprise moments on screen.

Automated conditional giveaways
Donations above a minimum amount automatically place the viewer in the giveaway.

Example: anyone who sends R$ 5 or more joins the list without you pausing the live.

OBS automation with Pix and chat
Pix and messages can mute a microphone, switch a scene, or reveal a source in OBS.

Example: R$ 10 Pix with the word muted silences the microphone for a few seconds.

Alerts that feel alive
The screen reacts with glow, sound, and movement as soon as the right interaction happens.

Example: a donation can flash the overlay, play a sound, and then clear the stage for the next moment.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions about OBS automation for streamers

Direct answers for creators who want to replace rigid widgets with their own automation layer.

Open beta to try

Not in the old way. You create rules that make sense for your stream, while Live Hook adapts the signals coming from the available integrations.

You connect Live Hook to OBS once. After that, each rule can mute a microphone, switch a scene, show a source, or fire an alert when the chosen condition happens.

Yes. You define the condition, such as a minimum amount or keyword, and Live Hook places the participant on the list automatically.

Yes. Live Hook is designed to react at stream speed: the signal arrives, the rule is recognized, and the action appears on screen without manual handling.

No. The screens used inside OBS are protected, and access is prepared to work only in the right context for your broadcast.