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Learn MoreThe best AI clip makers for gaming in 2026 are Eklipse, Medal.tv, and Spikes Studio — each built to automatically detect kills, clutches, and hype moments so you never have to scrub through hours of footage manually.
You already know the feeling. You played a genuinely insane game last night. Maybe a five-kill clutch in Valorant, maybe a final-zone win in Apex. You want to share it. But finding the exact moment inside a three-hour VOD, trimming it, adding captions, resizing it for TikTok — that is 45 minutes of work for a 30-second clip.
Most gamers just skip it. The moment disappears.
AI clip makers solve this problem by watching your footage automatically and flagging the best moments before you ever open an editor. The right tool processes your stream or recording in the background, surfaces the highlights, and has them ready for export while you are still in your post-game lobby.
The catch: not all AI clip tools work the same way. Some are built for live-stream VOD processing. Others record locally while you play. Some excel at FPS games and miss everything else. Picking the wrong tool means you either get no usable clips or spend more time fixing bad ones than you would have spent editing manually.
This guide covers the best AI clip makers for gaming in 2026, how to choose between them based on your setup, and how to build a workflow that turns your best moments into consistent content.
What Makes an AI Clip Maker for Gaming Different
Not every clip tool that calls itself “AI” earns the label. There is a real difference between tools that passively record footage and let you clip manually versus tools that actively analyze your gameplay to find the moments worth sharing.
True AI gaming clip makers use at least one of these detection methods:
- Kill and event detection: The AI recognizes in-game events — kills, deaths, multi-kills, objective captures — by analyzing visual and audio patterns specific to each game title
- Audio hype detection: Voice pitch spikes, sudden shouting, or chat message velocity signal exciting moments
- Game-specific training: The AI is trained on footage from specific titles to recognize what “exciting” looks like in that game’s context
- Real-time flagging: Some tools let you trigger a clip mid-game via voice command or hotkey, which the AI then polishes automatically
The practical result is that you stream or record your session, and when you come back the tool has already identified your best 10 to 20 moments. You review, trim if needed, and post. That is the workflow.
The 5 Best AI Clip Makers for Gaming in 2026
1. Eklipse — Best for Active Streamers
Eklipse is built specifically for streamers on Twitch, YouTube, Kick, and Facebook. Connect your channel, and after each stream the AI processes your VOD in the cloud, identifies highlights using kill detection and audio hype signals, and delivers ready-to-review clips to your dashboard.
What sets it apart: Zero FPS impact during your stream. Because everything happens in the cloud after the session ends, there is nothing running on your PC while you play. For streamers already pushing their systems, this matters.
Game coverage: Trained on over 1,000 titles. Detection accuracy is highest for FPS and battle royale games — Valorant, Call of Duty, Fortnite, Apex Legends, and similar titles get the most reliable automatic clipping. Slower-paced strategy and RPG games see lower accuracy.
Vertical video support: Eklipse automatically reformats clips to 9:16 for TikTok, Reels, and Shorts. Add captions, memes, overlays, and your channel branding inside Eklipse Studio, then post directly from the dashboard.
Pricing:
- Free: Up to 15 clips per stream, 720p, watermarked, 14-day storage
- Premium (~$12.50/month annual): Unlimited clips, 1080p, no watermark, 10x faster processing, voice-command clipping
Best for: Twitch or YouTube streamers who want a cloud-based, set-and-forget clipping pipeline.
Limitations: Requires VOD access after stream ends (Twitch users must enable “Store past broadcasts”). Does not work for offline recording sessions.
2. Medal.tv — Best for Non-Streamers Recording Locally
Medal.tv takes a different approach. Instead of processing VODs after the fact, it runs in the background while you play and captures a rolling buffer of your recent gameplay. Hit a hotkey (or use voice commands), and Medal saves the last 15 to 60 seconds as a clip.
It also has an Auto-Clip AI feature that watches for game events and flags them automatically — no hotkey required.
What sets it apart: Medal works for gamers who are not streaming at all. If you play ranked games offline and want to capture your best moments without running OBS, Medal handles it. The social layer is also genuinely useful — a community of over 15 million gamers shares clips natively on the platform.
System requirements: Works on any GPU with hardware-accelerated encoding. Intel integrated graphics, AMD, Nvidia — all supported. The trade-off is 8-12% RAM overhead while running in the background.
Sharing workflow: Medal generates instant embed links formatted for Discord, Reddit, and other platforms. Clips save locally and sync to Medal’s cloud. The built-in editor lets you trim and add basic overlays before sharing.
Pricing: Medal has a free tier with solid core functionality. Premium tiers add 4K recording, extended clip length, and priority cloud sync.
Best for: Non-streamers who play ranked or casual games and want automatic local recording without a full streaming setup.
Limitations: Less optimized for TikTok-style vertical content than cloud-based tools. The social feed is gaming-specific and does not cross-post to TikTok or Reels natively.
3. Spikes Studio — Best for TikTok-First Creators
Spikes Studio is designed for creators who prioritize aesthetic output. Where Eklipse and Medal focus on detection accuracy, Spikes emphasizes what the final clip looks like on social media.
The AI identifies highlight moments from uploaded footage or stream VODs, then applies fully customizable templates: animated text, branded overlays, transitions, hashtag suggestions, and platform-specific formatting. The output looks polished without manual design work.
What sets it apart: The best template and branding customization of any tool on this list. If you care about your clips having a consistent visual identity — fonts, colors, animations — Spikes gives you more control than Eklipse or Medal.
Detection approach: Spikes analyzes uploaded footage (not live-stream connected) using audio and activity signals. It supports gaming content but is not trained on game-specific events the way Eklipse is, so detection is slightly more generic.
Pricing: Paid plans starting around $19/month. No meaningful free tier for ongoing use.
Best for: Gaming content creators with an established TikTok or YouTube Shorts presence who prioritize visual branding over raw detection volume.
Limitations: More expensive than Eklipse. Requires manual upload rather than automatic stream processing. Detection accuracy lower for game-specific events.
4. Outplayed (by Overwolf) — Best for In-Game Integration
Outplayed is built into the Overwolf platform, which means it runs as an in-game overlay while you play. When a kill happens, the overlay registers the event and saves it — no manual input required.
What sets it apart: Real-time in-game event detection. Rather than analyzing footage after the fact, Outplayed works with the game’s event data directly (via Overwolf’s API integrations) for supported titles. This makes detection more reliable than visual analysis alone.
Supported games: Strongest for League of Legends, Valorant, CS2, Apex, and other popular esports titles with Overwolf API support. For unsupported games, it falls back to visual detection.
Pricing: Free with an Overwolf account.
Best for: PC gamers who play supported competitive titles and want zero-latency event detection without streaming.
Limitations: Overwolf overlay adds some system overhead. Not available for console gaming. Less polished video export than Eklipse or Spikes.
5. Clypse — Best for Casual Gamers on a Budget
Clypse is a newer entry in 2026 that targets casual gamers who want AI clip detection without a steep learning curve or high price point. Upload any game recording, and Clypse identifies highlight moments and generates short clips automatically.
What sets it apart: Simplicity. The interface is stripped down, the workflow is straightforward, and the free tier is genuinely usable for low-volume clipping.
Pricing: Free tier available; paid plans under $10/month.
Best for: Casual gamers who record occasionally and want a simple way to clip highlights without committing to a full platform.
Limitations: Less accurate detection than Eklipse for specific game events. Limited customization options. No direct social posting integration.
How to Choose the Right AI Clip Maker for Your Setup
The best tool depends on three things: whether you stream, which games you play, and how you plan to distribute your clips.
If you stream on Twitch or YouTube
Use Eklipse. The cloud-based processing, zero FPS impact, and direct TikTok/Reels posting integration make it the cleanest workflow for streamers. Start with the free plan and upgrade when your clips are regularly reaching real audiences.
If you play offline without streaming
Use Medal.tv. The local buffer recording catches moments as they happen, and the auto-clip AI surfaces them for review. The community of 15 million gamers is a real bonus for getting early views on clips.
If you are building a gaming brand on TikTok
Use Spikes Studio (or Eklipse + Spikes in combination). Spikes’ template system gives you the brand consistency that builds recognizable short-form content over time.
If you play supported competitive titles on PC
Use Outplayed. Real-time in-game event detection is more reliable than post-hoc visual analysis for games with Overwolf API support.
Building a Gaming Clip Workflow That Actually Runs
Having the right tool is only half of it. The other half is making clip creation a repeatable habit rather than an occasional project.
Here is what a sustainable workflow looks like:
During your session: Play normally. If you are using Eklipse, nothing extra is needed. If you are using Medal, use the voice command “Medal clip that” after anything worth saving. Do not stop to review clips mid-session.
Immediately after your session: Spend 10-15 minutes in your clip dashboard. For Eklipse, this means reviewing the AI-detected clips and selecting the top 2-3. For Medal, it means reviewing flagged moments. You are looking for three things: a killer opening moment (no pun intended), a clear outcome, and something that makes someone watching want to see more.
Caption and format: Every clip needs captions. Most TikTok views happen without sound — a clip without captions loses a significant portion of its potential reach. Eklipse auto-captions are a useful starting point but need review. Gaming callouts, game-specific slang, and audio quality issues all produce caption errors.
Post with a CTA: Every clip you post should point people somewhere. Your Twitch channel, your YouTube, your next stream time — pick one and make it visible. Overlay text in the last two seconds works well: “Live on Twitch every night, 9PM EST.”
Review what performs: After 30 days, look at which clips got shares, not just views. Clips that get shared are the ones that made someone want to show their friends. That tells you what content to prioritize.
A Gamer Who Changed His Approach
Marcus had been streaming Apex Legends for 14 months with the same 30-50 concurrent viewers. He was clipping manually, maybe once a week when he had something “good enough.” His TikTok sat at 900 followers.
In September 2025, he switched to a daily clip routine using Eklipse. Not because every session was spectacular, but because posting consistently mattered more than posting perfectly. He also added a simple rule: every clip ends with a 3-second screen showing his stream schedule.
By December, his TikTok had 12,000 followers. His average Twitch concurrent went from 40 to 110. He did not get better at Apex. He got better at showing up consistently with content that pointed people back to his live channel.
The shift was not the tool. The shift was the system.
Want to build your own system? [Our full guide to growing on TikTok as a streamer] covers the complete workflow from stream to post.
FAQ: AI Clip Makers for Gaming
What is the best free AI clip maker for gaming?
Eklipse offers the most capable free tier for streamers — up to 15 clips per stream at 720p with watermark. Medal.tv is the best free option for non-streamers recording locally. Outplayed by Overwolf is free and has strong in-game event detection for supported titles.
Do AI clip makers work with console games?
Most AI clip makers are PC-focused. Medal.tv and Eklipse do not directly support console recordings. For console clips, you need a capture card (Elgato, AVerMedia) to route footage to your PC, then process it through your preferred tool. Eklipse can handle VODs uploaded from console recordings this way.
How accurate is AI kill detection for FPS games?
For top FPS titles like Valorant, Call of Duty, and Apex Legends, Eklipse reports high accuracy because its AI is trained specifically on those games’ visual events. Accuracy drops for lesser-played titles and for games with unusual visual styles. Expect to review AI-flagged clips rather than posting them blindly — the AI surfaces good candidates, but you make the final call.
Will running a clip tool slow down my game?
Cloud-based tools like Eklipse process footage after your session ends, so there is zero performance impact during play. Local tools like Medal.tv use 8-12% RAM overhead in the background. Outplayed via Overwolf adds a small overlay. If frame rate matters for your gameplay, Eklipse is the cleanest option.
How long should gaming clips be for TikTok?
Between 15 and 60 seconds performs best for gaming clips on TikTok in 2026. Under 15 seconds works for single-moment highlights like one-shot kills or instant wins. Over 60 seconds tends to see steeper drop-off unless the clip has a strong narrative (comeback win, full round clutch). Aim for 30-45 seconds as a default.
Conclusion
An AI clip maker for gaming removes the biggest obstacle between you and consistent content: the time cost of editing. The tools in 2026 — Eklipse for streamers, Medal.tv for offline players, Spikes for brand-focused creators, Outplayed for in-game detection — all reduce a 45-minute manual editing task to a 10-15 minute review session.
The choice between them comes down to your setup. Streamer on Twitch? Eklipse. Non-streaming PC gamer? Medal. Building a TikTok brand? Spikes or Eklipse plus a template workflow.
What does not change is the system: play, review clips, caption everything, post with a CTA, and check what gets shared. The tool automates the hard part. The consistency is still on you.
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