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Watch party predictions: the second screen for live streams

A watch room puts the stream and the calls side by side. The scene plays, picks open, the crowd commits points, and you see the community’s lean move before the moment lands.

What’s in a watch room

The stream embeds at the top with the event’s beat timeline under it, the open predictions next to it, and a live feed of anonymized picks rolling in. Twitch chat rides along in a collapsible panel, so nobody has to choose between chatting and calling. Everything refreshes on its own while the tab is open.

Picks that move with the scene

Hosts open a call - “does the crew make it out?” - and viewers commit free Pulse Points on an option. The fan lean updates live as points land, picks flip to closing-soon as the deadline nears, and curators can freeze picks mid-scene when the moment is about to resolve. Call it right and your points pay double.

Multiple POVs, one room

Big scenes have more than one camera. Hosts can attach several stream feeds - both sides of a standoff, every crew in a heist - and viewers swap POVs with one click without leaving the room or missing a pick.

On stream and off

Streamers can add the watch-party overlay as an OBS browser source: it shows the featured call, the live fan lean, and the countdown right on stream, so the whole audience sees the crowd’s read. A clip queue catches the aftermath.

Hosting one

Watch parties are run by a community’s owner and approved curators - Community Pro unlocks the hosting tools for your own community (it never buys points or an edge on any call). Viewers need nothing but a free account: join, open a room from what’s live, and call the next moment.