Skip to main content

Facebook Gaming lets content creators turn gameplay clips into Reels

We weren’t exaggerating when we recently noted that Meta’s social media platforms are becoming more like TikTok, going so far as adding new features to resemble it. Now, Facebook Gaming has released the Clips to Reels feature, which will allow content creators to, as the name heavily suggests, turn their live gameplay clips into Reels.

Meta first announced the Clips to Reels feature last month, giving content creators on Facebook the tools to cut down their otherwise long videos to 60 seconds in the Creator Studio on PC. Facebook Gaming announced on Wednesday that the new feature is available to partners and Level Up Creators.

Facebook Gaming Image used with permission by copyright holder

With Clips to Reels, gaming content creators can edit their streamed clips to make their gameplay and their face cam fit in a vertical format for their viewers to see on mobile. On PC, viewers can see the streamer’s gameplay footage of Fortnite or Apex Legends, for example, on full display while their face cam is on the bottom–left corner of the screen. Content creators can simply place the face cam on top and the gameplay footage on the bottom to convert the gameplay clip into a more effective Reel.

The Creator Studio Clips Library helps content creators streamline the process by letting them trim the clips to meet the length requirement for Reels and crop sections of them to make the dual views possible. Then, when they’re ready to share it with the world, they can either leave the Reel as is with the original audio and unobstructed view, or they can add music, stickers and/or GIFs. They would have to download the completed Reel and reupload it to Facebook and Instagram in order to do that, though.

Cristina Alexander
Cristina Alexander has been writing since 2014, from opining about pop culture on her personal blog in college to reporting…
Microsoft is shuttering Mixer as it partners with Facebook Gaming
microsoft shuts down mixer facebook gaming fbgmixer inline1

Microsoft announced it will shutter its Mixer streaming service on July 22 and start transitioning the service's content producers and users to Facebook Gaming. When Mixer shuts down, all of Mixer's sites and apps will redirect to their new homes on Facebook Gaming, the company said on Monday.

The surprise move comes as Microsoft's Mixer failed to gain a footing in the increasingly crowded game-streaming business dominated by Amazon's Twitch and YouTube. Microsoft said the agreement is "a key part of a broader effort that Xbox and Facebook Gaming are embarking on, bringing new experiences and opportunities to Facebook."

Read more
Facebook to take on Twitch and YouTube with a stand-alone gaming app
facebook f8 canceled coronavirus 2019 zuckerberg

Update: The Facebook Gaming app is now live for Android users. You can download it from here. 

Facebook's gaming division is ramping up efforts to compete with Twitch and YouTube with a new, dedicated mobile app that will let enthusiasts easily discover and watch live gameplays -- leaving no stone unturned in its effort to capitalize on the spike in video game streaming.

Read more
PlayStation, Facebook Gaming, Oculus VR to skip GDC 2020 due to coronavirus risk
Playstation 4

The teams behind Sony's PlayStation, Facebook Gaming, and the Oculus VR headset will not be in attendance at the Game Developers Conference 2020, in what is another blow to the video game industry from the new coronavirus outbreak.

Sony Interactive Entertainment, in a statement to GamesIndustry.biz, said that it has "made the difficult decision" to withdraw from GDC 2020 due to coronavirus concerns.

Read more