Most Twitch-to-Discord setups stop the moment the streamer goes live: they fire one notification and forget about it. An hour later your channel is a graveyard of "🔴 LIVE" posts pointing at offline streams. CloudMod's Twitch plugin treats the whole lifecycle — online and offline.
Per-streamer templates and ping roles
Several creators in one server shouldn't all look the same. Each streamer gets its own embed color, its own message template and, optionally, its own ping role. So your big partner can mention @stream-pings while a smaller affiliate posts quietly without a notification — your call, per streamer.
Templates support placeholders for streamer name, stream title, game and link, so a custom message stays personal without manual editing.
The offline edit
This is the feature that keeps the channel honest. CloudMod remembers the message it posted when a streamer went live. When the stream ends, it edits that same post into an offline state instead of leaving a misleading "live now" embed behind. No second message, no clutter — the original simply updates to reflect reality.
The result: anyone scrolling your notification channel sees an accurate picture of who is live right now, not who was live three hours ago.
/whoslive for the live picture
For an instant overview, the /whoslive slash command lists everyone in the network currently streaming, with direct links. Handy when a community runs many creators and you don't want to scroll the channel at all.
Built on a live connection
Notifications ride on Twitch's EventSub — a push connection, not constant polling. Go-live and offline events arrive promptly, and the bot only does work when something actually changes.
Setup tip
Configure one streamer end to end first: set the template, pick a ping role, send a test, then let the stream go offline and confirm the post edits itself. Once that full cycle looks right, add the rest of your creators with confidence.