Web app that scores and triages a Twitch channel's highlights by archive priority so streamers facing the 100-hour storage limit know which clips to download first
In April 2025 Twitch imposed a 100-hour cap on stored highlights and uploads, deleting excess starting with lowest-view clips. As of March 2025, 214,400 speedrun videos on speedrun.com were at risk. Streamers with thousands of hours of highlights had no tooling to intelligently prioritize which to download, which to archive to YouTube, and which to delete. StreamVODs automatically uploads Twitch clips to YouTube but does not provide triage scoring, watch-time analysis, or batch metadata export. A web app that reads a channel's full highlight list via Twitch API, scores each by view count, chat engagement, date, and whether it is cross-referenced in a leaderboard or external link, and produces a priority-sorted download queue would fill this gap. The 100-hour limit is permanent and the problem recurs with every new bulk highlight creator.
Score Breakdown
Social Proof 1 sources
Gap Assessment
Twitch's 100-hour cap is a permanent policy (April 2025). speedrun.com news documented 214,400 at-risk videos. StreamVODs (streamvods.com) only auto-uploads, no triage. Twitch's Video Producer sort by views/date is manual one-by-one. No tool provides bulk scored triage with external-link cross-reference. GamesRadar, Tubefilter, TechCrunch all covered community backlash confirming real streamer pain.