Both stream to multiple platforms. But they solve very different problems.
Restream is a multistreaming relay. You go live from OBS or their browser studio, and Restream copies your stream to multiple platforms simultaneously. It's built for live, interactive broadcasts where you're at the computer.
StreamView is a 24/7 streaming engine. You upload your content, build a playlist, and StreamView runs your stream around the clock on cloud servers. No computer required, no software to run. Built for always-on channels.
| Feature | StreamView | Restream |
|---|---|---|
| Built for 24/7 streaming | Yes — core purpose | No — built for live sessions |
| Computer required | No — runs on cloud servers | Yes — needs OBS or browser studio |
| Multi-platform streaming | YouTube, Twitch, Facebook, Kick | 30+ platforms |
| Playlist / queue management | Yes — audio and video queues, live editing | No |
| Auto-reconnect on disconnect | Yes — automatic failover | Depends on your encoder |
| Video render pipeline | Yes — AI visuals, auto-upload to YouTube | No |
| AutoPilot mode | Yes — generates and publishes content automatically | No |
| Live chat integration | No | Yes — aggregated chat across platforms |
| Browser-based studio | No (web dashboard for management) | Yes — Restream Studio |
| Overlays and branding | Logo, now-playing text, custom visuals | Overlays, banners, graphics |
| Pricing | From $28/mo per stream | Free tier, then ~$16-83/mo |
If you're a live streamer who sits at your computer during broadcasts, Restream is excellent. The chat aggregation alone is worth it — reading and responding to chat from Twitch, YouTube, and Facebook in a single window is a genuine time-saver. Their browser-based studio means you can go live without installing anything, and support for 30+ platforms gives you the widest possible reach.
For scheduled, interactive live sessions — gaming, podcasts, talk shows, events — Restream is purpose-built and does it well.
If you want a stream that runs 24/7 without your involvement, Restream can't do that. It relays your live stream — it doesn't generate one. You'd still need OBS running on a computer around the clock, and Restream sitting in the middle as a relay adds another point of failure.
StreamView handles the entire pipeline: your content lives on cloud servers, playlists loop continuously, transitions are generated automatically, and the stream recovers from disconnections without you touching anything. You manage everything from a web dashboard — add tracks, update visuals, change platforms — while the stream keeps running.
The render pipeline is something Restream doesn't offer at all. StreamView can take your audio tracks, pair them with AI-generated or uploaded visuals, and produce finished YouTube videos that you review and approve before they're published.
Restream is a multistreaming relay for live interactive sessions — you broadcast from OBS and Restream copies your stream to multiple platforms. StreamView is a 24/7 streaming engine — you upload content and it streams from cloud servers around the clock without your computer running.
No. Restream relays your live stream but does not generate one. You would still need OBS or another encoder running on a computer 24/7. StreamView runs entirely on cloud servers with no computer required.
Restream supports 30+ platforms. StreamView currently supports YouTube, Twitch, Facebook, and Kick (4 platforms). For 24/7 streaming use cases, these are the most relevant platforms.
Restream and StreamView aren't really competitors — they solve different problems. If you do live interactive streams and want multi-platform reach, use Restream. If you run an always-on channel and want it to take care of itself, StreamView is built for that.
See how StreamView stacks up against other platforms:
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