Fake Twitch Chat Generator and Twitch Chat Simulator

Create a fake Twitch stream chat screenshot with colored usernames, mod/VIP/sub badges, emotes, slow mode, and sub-only mode.

Configure Chat

Twitch chat is dark by default — switch to light mode if that matches your screenshot.

Chatters

Add each chatter, pick a username color, and toggle their badges.

P
M
D

Messages

Add each chat line, choose the author, and set an optional timestamp.

Login to Save Presets

Create an account to save your favorite settings and reuse them across different content.

Save colors, fonts, and layouts

Download & Share

High-quality PNG image (2x resolution)

Link duration

Social media mockup preview

Generate your next post in seconds

Create visuals and ideas with AI, then refine them in the simulator before exporting.

Try now
pixelquestlive
12.4K viewers
8:14 PMpixelquestlive: hey chat! mocking up the new stream layout before tonight's run, let me know what you think Kappa
8:15 PMmodmaya: layout's looking clean, chat's gonna love the new alert box PogChamp
8:16 PMdevon_plays: clip that clutch play right there Kreygasm
8:17 PMmodmaya: LUL that reaction never gets old
8:18 PMpixelquestlive: welcome everyone, remember chat rules are pinned above, glad you're here!
Send a messageChat

Fake Twitch Chat Generator — Create Fake Twitch Stream Chats & Screenshots

Use this fake Twitch chat generator to create realistic Twitch stream chat screenshots in seconds. Add chatters with custom usernames, colors, and badges, then write each line with emotes and an optional timestamp before you share it.

This Twitch chat simulator reproduces the real Twitch layout: a flat, no-bubble message list where every line shows badges, then a colored username, then the message text — no avatars, exactly like the real thing. Add a channel name and viewer count at the top, toggle slow mode or subscribers-only mode, sprinkle in classic emotes like Kappa, PogChamp, LUL, and Kreygasm, and switch between dark and light chat themes until the preview matches a real stream.

Clip creators use it for hype-moment recreations, moderators build onboarding and rules examples, marketers preview giveaway announcements, and educators create training conversations — all without ever going live. Nothing is streamed, no login is required, and every edit renders instantly in your browser.

What you can do with this fake Twitch chat generator

  • Fake Twitch chat screenshots: generate a realistic stream chat with custom chatters and messages.
  • Twitch chat simulator: build multi-chatter chats that match the real Twitch flat-list layout pixel for pixel.
  • Custom usernames and colors: set any username and pick from Twitch's classic bright color palette for each chatter.
  • Six badge types: add Broadcaster, Moderator, VIP, Subscriber, Prime, and Verified badges in any combination.
  • Classic emotes: type Kappa, PogChamp, LUL, or Kreygasm and see them highlighted as recognizable emote tokens.
  • Slow mode pill: show a Slow Mode status pill with a custom delay at the top of the chat.
  • Subscribers-only pill: show a Subscribers Only status pill for moderation scenarios.
  • Optional timestamps: toggle muted timestamps next to every chat line.
  • Channel header: set a channel name and a viewer count at the top of the chat.
  • Flat, no-bubble layout: every message renders as badges, colored username, colon, and text — never a chat bubble.
  • Dark and light mode: preview your chat in Twitch's dark theme by default or switch to light mode.
  • High-quality PNG export: download a clean image for clips, thumbnails, slides, and guides.
  • Save and reuse presets: store a chat setup and reload it for the next mockup.
  • No signup, no streaming: the tool never connects to Twitch and never goes live.
  • Privacy-first: all image and text processing stays entirely in your browser.

Why streamers and clip creators use a Twitch chat simulator

A realistic Twitch chat preview lets you catch typos, wrong badge combinations, and mismatched colors before you share a clip or thumbnail. Instead of screenshotting a live stream — and exposing real chatters' usernames — you build exactly the chat you need and export a clean image.

Streamers and creators reach for this fake Twitch chat generator for hype-moment recreations, moderation training, marketing previews, and presentation slides that need a Twitch-style visual. Because everything renders in-browser and exports as a PNG, you can drop the result straight into a clip, a thumbnail, a help article, or a deck without ever going live.

Looking for more Twitch tools? Visit the Twitch simulator hub for the full toolkit.

Want it written for you?

Turn any idea into real posts, captions, and on-brand visuals with our AI post generator — no design skills needed.

Try the AI Post Generator

How to create a fake Twitch chat

Build a realistic Twitch stream chat screenshot in under a minute — no account, no live stream.

  1. 1

    Set the channel

    Enter the channel name and an optional viewer count shown at the top of the chat header.

  2. 2

    Add your chatters

    Add each chatter with a username, pick a color from Twitch's bright palette, and toggle their badges — Broadcaster, Moderator, VIP, Subscriber, Prime, or Verified.

  3. 3

    Write the chat

    Add messages one at a time, pick the author for each, and sprinkle in classic emotes like Kappa or PogChamp for authenticity.

  4. 4

    Set chat modes

    Toggle Slow Mode with a custom delay or Subscribers Only mode to show the matching status pill at the top of the chat.

  5. 5

    Download the screenshot

    Switch between dark and light mode, review the live preview, then export a high-quality PNG. Nothing is ever sent live to Twitch.

How to tell if a Twitch chat screenshot is fake

Fabricated Twitch chat screenshots spread fast around clips and controversies, and tools like this one make convincing mockups in seconds. Knowing the tells protects you from being misled — and reminds you to use mockups responsibly.

Emotes rendered as plain text

A real Twitch chat renders emotes like Kappa or PogChamp as small images, not literal words. If a screenshot shows emote names as plain text with no image, look closer — that's a mockup tell, not a broken client.

Impossible badge combinations

Badge sets follow real rules: a Broadcaster's own badge rarely appears next to a Subscriber badge on their own channel, and Verified is reserved for a small set of accounts. Odd combinations can reveal a doctored screenshot.

Unrealistic chat speed

Popular channels scroll fast with many one-line drop-ins; a small channel with a huge viewer count and only a handful of generic messages doesn't match real chat behavior.

Interface details that don't match

Spacing, badge icons, colors, and the slow-mode or sub-only pill change between Twitch updates and between dark and light mode. Details that don't match the current app are a red flag.

We build this tool for honest uses — clips, moderation examples, education, and design mockups — and we recommend clearly labeling any mockup you share publicly so no one mistakes it for a real stream chat.

Twitch chat details to get right

Matching Twitch's real layout keeps your mockup believable and export-ready.

Badges + name + message

Twitch chat is a flat list with no avatars: any badges appear first, then a colored username, a colon, and the message text, all on one line that wraps naturally. This simulator follows that layout automatically.

No run-grouping

Unlike Discord or Slack, Twitch repeats the username on every single line — even for the same chatter talking twice in a row. Never merge consecutive messages under one name.

Bright, distinct colors

Twitch usernames use a fixed set of bright, saturated colors. Give each chatter a distinct one so the chat reads clearly at a glance.

Common mistakes when faking a Twitch chat

Grouping messages like Discord

Twitch never hides a repeated username — every line always shows the colored name again, even back-to-back from the same chatter.

Emotes with no visual distinction

Real Twitch emotes always render as small images. If you want authenticity, at least keep emote names visually distinct from the surrounding chat text.

Overusing rare badges

Verified and Prime badges are uncommon in most chats. Stacking them on every chatter breaks the illusion instantly.

Presenting a mockup as a real chat

Sharing a fabricated Twitch chat screenshot as if it were a real stream moment is misleading and can be defamatory. Always label mockups clearly and use them for honest purposes.

Frequently Asked Questions — Fake Twitch Chat Generator

How do I make a fake Twitch chat?

Add one or more chatters with a username, a color, and badges, then add a message, choose the author, and optionally set a timestamp. The live preview renders a realistic fake Twitch chat you can download as an image — nothing is ever streamed.

Is this a Twitch chat generator?

Yes. This is a full Twitch chat generator: add multiple chatters, assign Broadcaster, Moderator, VIP, Subscriber, Prime, or Verified badges, and build an entire chat log before exporting it as a screenshot.

Can I create a fake Twitch chat screenshot?

Yes. Build the whole chat with as many chatters and messages as you need, then export a high-quality PNG for clips, thumbnails, moderation examples, or tutorials.

Is the fake Twitch chat generator free?

Yes. The fake Twitch chat generator and Twitch chat simulator are completely free to use, with no signup required.

Can I add badges like Moderator, VIP, and Subscriber?

Yes. Each chatter can have any combination of Broadcaster, Moderator (green sword), VIP (pink diamond), Subscriber, Prime (purple crown), and Verified (blue check) badges, rendered flush against their username.

Can I add Twitch emotes like Kappa or PogChamp?

Yes. Type classic global emote names like Kappa, PogChamp, LUL, or Kreygasm directly into a message and the preview highlights them as recognizable emote tokens.

Does it support slow mode and sub-only mode?

Yes. Toggle Slow Mode with a custom delay, or Subscribers Only mode, and a status pill appears at the top of the chat exactly like a real Twitch stream.

Does it support Twitch dark mode?

Yes. The preview defaults to Twitch's dark chat theme because that is what most streams use. You can switch to light mode with one click.

Do I need to log in or connect my Twitch account?

No. The tool never connects to Twitch and never asks for a login. Everything runs locally in your browser.

Does this actually send messages to a live stream?

No. This is a preview and mockup tool only. It generates an image of a chat — it never goes live or sends anything to Twitch.

Is it legal to make a fake Twitch chat?

Creating a mockup for clips, previews, design, or education is fine. Sharing a fabricated screenshot as if it were real to deceive, harass, defame, or impersonate someone can be illegal. Use it honestly and label mockups clearly.