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Dual-camera and screen sharing on the KICK - Go Live app (IOS only)

Two of KICK - Go Live's standout features are dual-camera streaming and screen sharing. Together, they let you create dynamic mobile streams that go well beyond a single camera pointing at your face.

This guide covers how each feature works, how to use it effectively, and the privacy considerations you should know about.

If you have not yet set up the KICK - Go Live app, see Getting started with the KICK - Go Live app first.

⚠️ Bear in mind that the dual-camera feature may not be supported by some Android devices.

Dual-camera streaming

Dual-camera mode broadcasts your front and back cameras at the same time, perfect for:

  • IRL streams — show your reactions in one camera and what you are looking at in the other

  • Tutorial content — your face plus a workspace, instrument, or activity

  • Travel and event content — your reactions alongside the scene around you

  • Co-host setups — physical presence with someone else in front of the back camera

How does the dual-camera look on stream?

The dual-camera feature uses a picture-in-picture layout. One camera fills the main screen, and the other appears as a smaller window in one corner.

Customising the layout

You have some control over how the dual-camera layout appears:

  • Move the small camera between the four corners of the screen, top left, top right, bottom left, bottom right

  • Swap which camera is the main one and which is the small one, useful for switching focus mid-stream

⚠️ The size of the picture-in-picture window is not currently adjustable. Both cameras display at fixed proportions.

Switching between single and dual-camera mid-stream

You can switch between single-camera and dual-camera mode at any point during your stream. To switch:

  1. While streaming, tap the dual-camera icon in the app

  2. The view updates immediately for your Viewers

This is useful when your content shifts, for example, starting a stream in single-camera while you settle in, then switching to dual-camera once the action begins.

Screen sharing

Screen sharing broadcasts whatever is on your phone screen directly to your stream. This is great for:

  • Mobile gameplay — stream the games you actually play on your phone

  • Tutorials and demos — walk through apps, settings, or content

  • Reaction streams — react to videos, social media, or other content on your phone

  • Sharing media — show photos, articles, or anything else on your device

How screen sharing works

When you enable screen sharing in the KICK - Go Live app, your entire screen is shared. Whatever appears on your phone is visible to Viewers — including apps you switch to, notifications, and anything else on the screen.

There is no option to share only a specific app or window. Screen sharing is all-or-nothing.

Screen sharing and audio

By default, audio from your screen is shared along with the video. This means:

  • Music, video sound, app sound effects all come through to your stream

  • System sounds (notification chimes, keyboard taps if you have them on) also broadcast

You can mute the screen audio if you want, only your microphone to be heard, useful for talking over content without doubling up the audio.

Combining screen sharing with the camera

⚠️ KICK - Go Live does not currently support combining screen sharing with the camera (such as a face-cam picture-in-picture over your screen content). When you turn on screen sharing, the camera turns off.

If you want a face-cam overlay alongside screen content, you would need to stream from a desktop setup instead. See How to Stream on KICK.com for desktop streaming options.

Time limits on screen sharing

There is no time limit on screen sharing. You can use it for as long as your stream runs.

Privacy considerations during screen sharing

Screen sharing reveals everything on your phone screen, including things you may not have thought about. Before you start screen sharing, take a moment to protect yourself.

⚠️ Important things to handle before screen sharing:

Notifications

When notifications appear on your screen during a stream, they are visible to your Viewers. This can leak:

  • Personal messages (text, WhatsApp, Discord, etc.)

  • Email previews

  • Bank notifications and account balances

  • Calendar event details

  • Security codes, 2FA codes

  • Anything else your apps send notifications about

Before screen sharing:

  • Turn on Do Not Disturb mode to silence and hide notifications

  • Sign out of personal accounts in apps you do not need

  • Close apps you do not want Viewers to see

Sensitive content

Be mindful of:

  • Apps you have open in the background — when you switch apps or use the recent apps view, Viewers see what is there

  • Browser tabs and history — close anything personal

  • Saved photos and videos — Viewers can see thumbnails when you open the gallery

  • Auto-fill information — addresses, phone numbers, payment details that pop up in forms

Account safety

If you receive a 2FA code or security email during a stream, do not show it on screen. Switch off screen sharing momentarily, handle the verification, then resume.

For more on protecting yourself online, see Streamer Safety Tips: How to Stream Safely on KICK.

Tips for great dual-camera and screen-share streams

A few practical tips that make these features land better.

For dual-camera streams

  • Use both cameras intentionally — what is each camera showing, and why?

  • Position the small camera where it does not block important action — use the four corner options

  • Watch your lighting — both camera feeds need to be readable. Phone cameras struggle in low light

  • Stabilise your phone (IOS only)— a tripod or gimbal helps when you are moving or in dual-camera mode

  • Mind your audio — your phone mic picks up sound from wherever you are; environmental noise can dominate

⚠️ Bear in mind that the dual-camera feature may not be supported by some Android devices.

For screen sharing streams

  • Practise the privacy steps above before going live

  • Use landscape orientation for video content — most content is designed for it

  • Think about pace — screen content can be visually dense; give Viewers a moment to take it in

  • Talk over the content — narration keeps the stream engaging when the screen does the work

  • Have a "back to camera" moment ready — switching back to your face mid-stream resets engagement

Troubleshooting

My dual-camera small window is in the wrong place.

Tap the small camera window to cycle through the four corner positions.

I cannot see the screen sharing toggle.

Make sure your stream is set up, and you are on the streaming screen. The screen sharing option appears in the streaming controls.

My screen share has no audio.

Check that screen audio is not muted in the app. Also, check your device's overall sound — if your phone is on silent mode, system sounds may not transmit.

My stream froze when I switched apps.

Some apps temporarily pause screen capture in Android and iOS for security reasons. Avoid switching to apps that block screen capture (banking apps, secure password managers) while streaming.

A notification flashed on my stream — what do I do?

Stay calm. Do not react in a way that draws attention to it. After the stream, review what was shown. If sensitive information was leaked, take steps to secure it (change passwords, etc.).

Still need help?

For questions about dual-camera or screen sharing on KICK - Go Live, contact [email protected]. Please include:

  • Your KICK Streamer username

  • Your device and operating system version

  • A description of what you are trying to do or what is not working

Related articles

  • Getting started with the KICK - Go Live app

  • Settings and stream quality on the KICK - Go Live app

  • Streamer Safety Tips: How to Stream Safely on KICK

  • Recognising phishing, scams, and impersonation on KICK

  • How to Stream on KICK.com (desktop alternative for face-cam over screen)

  • How to Stream Mobile Games to KICK

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