Have you heard the term "stream sniping" but you're not quite sure what it means? Stream sniping is essentially a form of cheating where someone uses a stream to locate a streamer in game to troll or harass them. In this article, we go into a little more depth about what stream sniping is, why it's considered bad etiquette, and what you can do to stop it in your streams. Keep reading to learn more.
Stream Sniping: Overview
Stream sniping is the act of using a streamer's live stream to maliciously insert oneself into that stream in a targeted manner. This can manifest in many ways, and usually ends with the streamer being trolled or harassed. Stream sniping is considered bad etiquette and is a bannable offense on Twitch.
Steps
How to Prevent Stream Sniping
-
Set a delay interval. Most streamers want to have their streams as close to real-time as possible so they can appropriately engage with their chat. Unfortunately, this also makes stream sniping incredibly easy. To combat this, you can add a delay to your stream in your streaming software (OBS, Streamlabs, XSplit, etc.) or your streaming service settings.
- How you do this varies depending on what streaming software or service you use. However, the approximate locations will likely be similar to where OBS and Twitch have this option:
- In OBS, go to Settings > Advanced > Stream Delay .
- On Twitch, go to Stream Manager > Preferences > Channel .
- How you do this varies depending on what streaming software or service you use. However, the approximate locations will likely be similar to where OBS and Twitch have this option:
-
Don't add "TTV" to your username. Many streamers will add "TTV" (Twitch TV) to their username to help grow their audience . However, this might make you a target of stream snipers. If possible, change your username to remove the TTV.
- If a game allows you to write a bio or status message, avoid putting your stream link there as well.
-
Hide any identifiable information. Some games have the option to hide your username/character name, server name, location, player icon, or emblem. If so, take advantage of these settings to hide this information so stream snipers won't be able to find you.
-
Use the overlay. Your stream overlay can be used to hide your server name, mini-map, and/or in-game chat to further deter stream snipers from finding you in game.
-
Be careful about advertising IRL streams. While it can be really fun and very rewarding to meet your fans, advertising where you're going to be doing an IRL stream also extends an invitation to stream snipers. Consider sharing this location only with certain fans (i.e., those subscribed to a Patreon page).
- Also, make sure you always have someone you trust with you when doing an IRL stream for safety reasons.
-
Report the stream snipers. If you catch a stream sniper in the act, report them both in the game and to the streaming service (i.e., Twitch or YouTube ). Stream sniping is a reportable—and sometimes bannable—offense, as it's considered harassment or toxic behavior.