It’s actually a very practical idea—and honestly, a feature a lot of streamers have wanted in
OBS Studio for years.
Why it’s a strong idea
Automated start/stop streaming would solve some real problems:
- Consistency – You could run streams on a fixed schedule (like a TV broadcast), even if you’re not at your computer.
- Convenience – No need to manually go live at odd hours.
- Global audiences – You can target different time zones (e.g., overnight streams).
- Event-based content – Pre-recorded streams (premieres, loops, ambient content) could run automatically.
This is especially useful for:
- 24/7 channels (music, study streams, ambient cams)
- Businesses running scheduled broadcasts
- Creators who want “always-on” content
⚠️ The downsides (and why OBS doesn’t fully do this by default)
There are a few challenges:
- No real-time monitoring
If something breaks (internet drops, scene glitches), there’s no one there to fix it.
- Platform interaction
Chat, moderation, and engagement are a big part of streaming. Fully automated streams can feel “dead.”
- Safety risks
If your mic/camera accidentally turns on or a scene is wrong, it could run unattended.
- Technical complexity
Scheduling requires OS-level automation (task schedulers, scripts), which OBS tries to keep simple for most users.
️ Can this already be done?
Not natively in OBS—but you can achieve it with workarounds:
- Scripts + Windows Task Scheduler / macOS Automator
- OBS plugins (like advanced scene switchers with timing features)
- External streaming automation tools
So the concept is already possible, just not built-in cleanly.
My take
It’s a great idea—but best as an “advanced feature,” not default behavior.
If OBS added it, the ideal version would include:
- A clear scheduler interface
- Safety checks (confirm scenes, mute mic, etc.)
- Optional auto-record instead of stream
- A “failsafe stop” if something goes wrong
Bottom line
My idea is:
- Technically feasible ✔️
- Already partially used by power users ✔️
- Valuable if implemented safely ✔️
But it needs guardrails so people don’t accidentally stream something they didn’t intend.