Copy a Twitch clip link, paste it into Clypse from Safari or Chrome, and save an MP4. Need a TikTok-ready version? Convert it to vertical 9:16 with captions before export.
The flow is designed for thumbs, not desktop menus.
In the Twitch app, open the clip, tap Share, and copy the link. Desktop clip URLs work too.
Open Clypse in Safari or Chrome. Paste the URL directly into the browser flow, no app required.
Export the clip as an MP4, or turn it into a vertical short with captions before posting.
Plain downloaders give you a horizontal file. Clypse can dynamically format-convert Twitch clips for the feed you want: original MP4 for saving, or vertical short-form export for posting.
Save a standard video file that works in Photos, Files, CapCut, Discord, and every major editor.
Use a clip URL for one moment, or paste a full Twitch VOD when you want Clypse to find highlights.
Convert horizontal Twitch footage to 9:16, add captions, and center the action for short-form feeds.
Yes. Open Clypse in Safari, paste the Twitch clip URL, and export from the browser.
Yes. You can export the original MP4 or convert it to vertical 9:16 with captions before posting.
Use the full Twitch downloader or paste a VOD. Clypse can scan the whole stream and suggest up to 15 clips from one video.
The mobile guide covers Safari, Chrome, Android downloads, camera roll saving, and troubleshooting when iOS hides the download button.
Figures referenced reflect industry trends and may vary by content, audience, and platform.