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Only Verified Users. No Bots or Fakes.
900,000+ Active Users from Around the World
3,500,000+ Registered Members

Join Live Stream
Browse a feed of live streams happening right now and step into any room with one tap. Inside the stream you can send live comments, tap to send hearts, send virtual gifts to the streamer, follow them so you get notified next time they go live, and share the stream with a friend. Multi-guest rooms let you join the streamer on screen when they invite viewers up. It is interactive, real time, and built around what you do, not what you watch.

Discover Popular Streamers and Streams
The Discover feed surfaces what is trending across Superlive right now: top streamers, rising creators, and rooms picking up the most engagement in the last hour. You can filter by category, search by language or region, follow streamers to build your own personalized feed, and turn on notifications so you never miss a creator going live. Leaderboards highlight the most-loved streams of the day, so finding someone worth your time takes seconds, not scrolling.

Meet New People
Superlive connects you with real people from around the world the moment you open Superlive. You can browse live rooms, jump into a 1 on 1 video call, or filter by region and language to find people who actually fit the kind of conversation you want tonight. With instant matching, real-time translation cues, and built-in safety tools like block, mute, and report, Superlive does the legwork of bringing someone interesting in front of you. You decide who is worth staying for.

Start 1 on 1 Video Call
Tap once and Superlive pairs you with one new person for a private video call, anywhere in the world. Use the filters to choose region, language, or interest if you want to meet someone in a specific group, or leave it open and see who shows up. If the conversation flows, you can stay, follow each other, and pick it up again later. If not, one tap brings you the next person. It is a fast, low-pressure way to make new friends, practice a language, or simply talk to someone real, with safety tools always one tap away.
Superlive: The Best Live Streaming Platform
In the next minute, with Superlive open on your phone, you can either step in front of a live audience or sit face to face with one new person on a random 1v1 video call. Same app, two doors. Pick the one that fits your mood, tap once, and you are already in the room. Superlive is built for the moments when scrolling stops feeling like enough, when you want to be seen, heard, surprised, or simply not alone with your screen.







You can perform, you can listen, you can flirt with the idea of being a creator, or you can just say hello to someone new and see where the conversation goes. The point is not what the app has. The point is what you can do with it, what it adds to your evening, and how easily it folds into whatever you were already doing on your phone tonight. Open Superlive, pick how you want to start, and the rest takes care of itself.
What you can do on Superlive
You do not need to plan, prepare, or polish anything to use Superlive. From the moment you open the app, you have two clear paths in front of you, and either one of them takes about sixty seconds to enter.
If you want to be seen. You can go live in front of a real audience without booking a slot, building an audience first, or owning any equipment beyond your phone. Tap Go Live, choose a title that says what you feel like doing tonight, and your stream is up. Viewers walk in, comments start moving, hearts start floating across your screen, and you can talk back to whoever shows up. You are not waiting for anything. You are already broadcasting.
If you want a real one to one conversation. You can start a random 1v1 video call and be face to face with one new person within seconds. Tap to match, and the next person who is also looking for a conversation appears on your screen. You see their face, they see yours, you say hi or you skip to the next one. No long bios, no swiping for an hour, no waiting for someone to reply tomorrow. You meet now, you talk now, and if it clicks you stay; if it does not, you move on without drama.
Both paths live in the same Superlive. You can switch between them in the same evening: warm up on a 1v1, then jump on stage when you feel like it.
What live streaming actually feels like
Live streaming on Superlive feels less like recording a video and more like opening your front door to whoever is curious about your night. You hit go live, and within a few breaths your viewer count starts ticking up. Maybe it goes to three, maybe it goes to thirty, maybe more if your topic catches. People say hello in the chat. They ask you questions. They send little hearts that float up across the screen when they are vibing with you. Some of them send gifts, which are a small, public way for them to say I am really enjoying this, please keep going.
A free live stream is a real-time broadcast from your phone to anyone who joins, with text comments and reactions running alongside your video. It is not a recording, it is happening right now, and that is what makes it different from any other content you make.
What changes when you stream live is the rhythm of your talking. You stop performing for a camera and start talking to a room. Someone asks where you are from, you answer. Someone says they have been having a rough day, you say something kind back. Someone notices the plant behind you and you laugh and tell its boring backstory. None of this would happen if you were editing a clip alone in your bedroom. It only happens because the room is full of strangers, and they came to spend a few minutes of their night with you.
That is the part you cannot get anywhere else, and it is the reason people open Superlive when they want to feel less alone and more useful at the same time.
What a random 1v1 video call actually feels like
A random 1v1 video call on Superlive is the opposite shape of a live stream. Instead of one of you talking to many, it is you and exactly one other person, sharing the same private window. You tap match, the screen pulses for a second or two, and then a new face shows up. You see them, they see you, and the conversation either starts or you both move to the next round.
What surprises most first time users is how human it feels. There is no profile to skim through, no curated photo grid to judge, no carefully edited bio. There is just a face, in real time, with whatever lighting and mood they happen to be in. That stripped down honesty makes the first few seconds awkward in a good way. You smile, they smile back, somebody breaks the silence, and you are off.
Some calls last fifteen seconds. Some last forty minutes. Some of them turn into the best conversation you had all week, with someone you would never have met any other way. The point is not every call. The point is the rhythm: a few seconds of meeting, a few minutes of talking, a clean ending, and then the next person. Over an evening, you collect three or four small moments that actually felt like something, and that is enough.
If a call is not going anywhere, you swipe to the next person and try again. You do not owe anyone twenty minutes. The format is built around your time.
Moments Superlive was built for
Superlive is not really about features. It is about specific moments in your week when the app is exactly what you needed. These are the ones it was built for.
Sunday night, alone on the couch. You have already scrolled through every feed and you still feel restless. Instead of scrolling for another forty minutes, you open Superlive, jump on a 1v1, and end up laughing about nothing with someone three time zones away.
Lunch break in the office or at home. Twenty free minutes, no real plans. You drop into a live stream that looks fun, drop a comment, get a reply, and walk back to your afternoon a little lighter.
Your commute home, headphones in. You want sound, voices, presence, anything but more scrolling. A short 1v1 call gives you exactly that without feeling like a podcast you have to focus on.
You want to practice a language. You can match with people from regions and language groups you are studying. Five minutes of real conversation does more for your spoken language than an hour of grammar drills.
You want to perform, even if you do not have a stage. Maybe you sing, maybe you read your own writing out loud, maybe you do impressions, maybe you cook on camera. You do not need to build a fan base on another platform first. You can just go live tonight.
You want a creative outlet that costs you nothing to start. No subscription, no equipment, no editing software. Just your phone, your face, and your willingness to show up.
You miss feeling like part of a community. Whether you moved cities, moved countries, or simply went through a quiet stretch, a stream you watch every week or a 1v1 partner you click with starts to feel like a small social home.
You do not need to fit all of these moments. You only need one of them to feel familiar for Superlive to make sense in your week.
Going live, step by step
Here is exactly what you do, from a cold phone to a stream that is live.
1. Open Superlive and tap the live button at the bottom of the screen.
2. Allow camera and microphone access if your phone asks. This is the only permission step.
3. Type a short title that hints at what you are doing tonight. It can be as plain as Just chatting or as specific as Singing requests until midnight.
4. Pick a category if you want to be found by people who like that kind of stream.
5. Tap Start and you are live.
That is it. The first viewer usually shows up within seconds. You will see comments scroll, you will see hearts float, and you can answer the room as people walk in.
If you want to keep it small for your first time, you can use a closed setting where only friends or followers can join. If you want to maximize reach, you keep it public and Superlive helps surface your stream to people who like that kind of content. Either way, the action you take is the same: open the app, hit live, and start talking.
Your first 1v1 video call, step by step
The 1v1 path is even shorter.
1. Open Superlive and tap the random video call button.
2. Allow camera and microphone access if prompted.
3. Choose any filters you want to use, such as the region or language of the people you want to meet.
4. Tap Match and wait a couple of seconds.
5. Say hi to whoever appears on your screen.
If you do not click, you tap Next and the app finds someone else. There is no obligation, no awkward exit speech, no judgment from anyone. The person on the other side knows the format and is using it the same way you are.
In a single fifteen minute session, you can meet five to ten new people and have one or two conversations that actually go somewhere. That is a lot of human contact for the cost of a coffee break.
What Superlive adds to your day
Apps usually promise time. Superlive promises something a little different. It gives you back presence.
Company when scrolling has stopped being enough. Some nights, the feeds run out. You have already seen everything you wanted to see and you still feel restless. Superlive replaces that loop with one real face, one real conversation, and a clear ending whenever you decide.
A stage when you want to perform. You can sing, talk, play, react, react badly, joke, story-tell, all of it, without booking anything or waiting for permission. Your phone becomes a working stage as soon as you open the app.
An audience for what you already do well. Maybe you make people laugh at parties. Maybe you give the best dating advice your friends know. Maybe you cook quiet meals or you do your makeup very well. Superlive lets you take that thing you already do, point a camera at it, and let strangers enjoy it with you.
Conversation practice in another language. Language is rhythm and confidence as much as vocabulary. Five minutes of trying to keep a real conversation alive with someone in your target language teaches you what no app can.
A creative outlet that costs nothing to start. No gear, no setup, no studio. The phone in your hand is the studio.
A space where being yourself is the content. You do not have to pretend you have a brand. You do not have to script anything. You can simply be the person you are tonight, and that is allowed to be enough.
These are the outcomes. Not features, outcomes. They are why people come back to Superlive after the first night, and they are what you should expect to feel after your first few sessions.
Tools that make you look and sound your best on camera
The camera matters less than the cadence of your conversation, but it does matter, and Superlive gives you simple ways to handle it.
You can soften your light in two taps so you stop worrying about how the camera sees you. You can pick a tone that flatters your skin without making you look unrecognizable. You can blur a messy background so the focus stays on your face. You can hide your camera and stream voice-only when you want to keep your face private and still go live.
On the sound side, you can keep your microphone normal or boost it slightly so quiet voices still carry, and you can mute yourself in one tap when someone in your house starts vacuuming. Small things, big difference in how confident you sound.
None of this requires you to be a streamer with a setup. It is built so a person on a couch in dim light still ends up looking and sounding good enough to be enjoyed. That is the whole point of putting these tools in your hand.
How your audience cheers: hearts, gifts, and live comments
When you go live, your audience has a few easy ways to tell you they are loving the stream, and you can feel it in real time.
Comments show up on the side of your screen as people type them. You can answer by name and the room suddenly feels like a real room. Reading comments out loud is one of the simplest ways to make a viewer feel seen, and it grows your audience faster than any clever trick.
Hearts are the lightweight version of applause. Viewers tap, hearts fly across your screen, and you see exactly when the energy in the room spikes. You learn what your audience likes by watching the heart count climb.
Gifts are the bigger version of that signal. Viewers can send virtual gifts to creators they want to support, and the gifts show up on your screen with sound and animation so the whole room sees them. They are a public way for a fan to say I am here for this, please keep going.
For a viewer, these tools are how you show love when you do not feel like typing a whole comment. For a streamer, they are the moments that make a live stream feel different from any other content you could make.
Turning streams into income: the creator path
A growing number of people on Superlive treat streaming as more than a hobby. They show up regularly, they get to know their audience, they get good at reading what works, and the small support from viewers stacks up into real income over time.
Here is what that looks like in plain terms. You stream often enough that the same people start showing up. They get used to your style, your humor, your time of day. They send hearts and gifts during your streams as a way of saying thank you. Those gifts can be converted, and creators on Superlive can withdraw their earnings according to the rules of the creator program. There is no guarantee of any specific amount, and earnings depend on how often you stream, how engaged your audience is, and how well you build a loyal community over time. What is guaranteed is that the path is open: you do not need a sponsor, an agency, or an existing fan base from another platform. You can start tonight, and you grow from there.
The smart approach is not to chase income on day one. It is to enjoy your first few streams, learn what your audience likes, build a rhythm you can sustain, and let the support come as your community grows. Treat your viewers well, show up at the same time when you can, talk to people by name, and the rest follows.
Made for mobile, made for the spaces in your day
Superlive runs on your phone, and that choice was on purpose. The moments you most want to stream or jump on a call are not happening at a desk. They are happening on a couch, on a balcony, in a kitchen, on a quiet bus, in bed before sleep. Those are the spaces in your day where being alone with a screen turns lonely, and they are exactly where the app is supposed to live.
On mobile, you can go live in landscape or portrait depending on what you are doing, and Superlive handles both cleanly. You can hold the phone in your hand or set it on a stand and step back. You can start a stream while a coffee is brewing and finish it before the cup is cold. You can match into a 1v1 during a fifteen minute break and walk back to your day a little less drained.
If you sometimes use Superlive at home with better lighting and a steadier shot, that is great, but the design assumption is that your stream tonight is happening from wherever you actually are. The app meets you there.
Safe by design: what Superlive does while you focus on the show
Real life lesson: any app that puts you face to face with strangers has to take safety seriously, not as a footer line but as a feature you can feel. Superlive is built so you can focus on the conversation or the stream, while the platform handles the rest in the background.
You can block any user from your room or your call with one tap. The block sticks. They cannot rejoin under the same account.
You can report inappropriate behavior in one motion. Reports go to a moderation team that reviews them, and serious violations end accounts.
You can mute or remove disruptive viewers during a live stream so a small problem does not derail your evening.
Beyond what you can do, the platform itself watches for clearly forbidden behavior using a combination of automated systems and human review. The rules are explicit: no nudity, no harassment, no hate, no minors, no scams. The community guidelines are written in plain language so there is no ambiguity about what gets you removed.
Here is the part to internalize. Superlive does a lot to keep the space healthy, but you also have control. Do not share your home address, your full real name, your workplace, or your other social handles with someone you just met on a 1v1. Keep that information for connections that have earned it. Use the report and block tools without hesitation. You will lose nothing by being a little cautious, and you will gain a much better experience.
Adults only, and why that matters
Superlive is built for adults, eighteen and over. That rule protects everyone, including you. A platform that mixes generations on live video would never feel safe to anyone, and the experience would be worse for it. By keeping Superlive 18+, the community stays appropriate for the kinds of conversations and content that make the app worth opening. If you see anything that suggests a minor is on the platform, report it. That single tap matters more than any setting.
Tips that make your first night on Superlive go well
There is no special talent required to enjoy your first night on Superlive, but a few small adjustments make a big difference.
Lighting beats everything else. Sit facing a window, a lamp, or any soft light source. A face that is well lit gets more comments, more hearts, and more matches than a face in the dark.
Sit at eye level. Hold your phone at eye height or prop it on something steady. Filming from below the chin is universally unflattering, and viewers will skip a stream that looks uncomfortable.
Pick one thing to be about for the next ten minutes. Whether you are streaming or on a 1v1, having a small theme in your head makes the first awkward seconds easier. Tonight I am chatting and listening to good music is enough.
Read the room out loud. On a stream, naming new viewers as they walk in, answering comments by hand, and reacting to gifts immediately turns a quiet room into a real one.
Treat 1v1 like meeting someone at a bar, not like an interview. Ask, listen, joke, share something small from your own day. Skip people you do not click with, kindly. Stay with people who feel easy to talk to.
Have a clean exit. When you want to end a stream or a call, say something nice and end it. You do not need a reason, and your audience or your match will appreciate the cleanliness.
These few habits separate a forgettable first night from one that makes you want to come back tomorrow.
Open Superlive and start
There are two simple ways to use Superlive tonight, and both of them take less than a minute. You can go live and let an audience walk into your room, or you can match into a random 1v1 video call and meet one new person face to face. Either way, you stop watching other people's content and start being part of something. That is what Superlive is for. Open the app, pick your door, and step in. Superlive is for adults eighteen and over, and the rest is whatever you make of it.