What this setup covers
This walkthrough shows a reliable Android IRL streaming setup built around IRL Pro and a cloud-hosted Streamable server.
It covers stream drop protection, an offline clips player fallback, and how to add chat and alerts overlays without relying on a local desktop OBS machine.
2Install IRL Pro on your Android phone
Download IRL Pro from the Play Store on your Android phone.
IRL Pro is a common choice for Android IRL streaming and works well with Streamable's SRTLA ingest flow.
3Use a cloud-hosted streaming server instead of streaming direct from your phone
If you stream directly from IRL Pro to Twitch, Kick, or YouTube, a temporary mobile signal drop can end the stream for viewers.
A cloud-hosted streaming server sits between your phone and the destination platform so the broadcast stays up while your phone reconnects.
Streamable also gives you an ingest-offline scene and clips player fallback, which is the main reliability upgrade for IRL streaming outdoors.
Sources and references
4Quick-launch your Streamable server
In Streamable, click Quick Launch or Start Server to boot your cloud streaming server.
Wait for it to finish starting, then open the dashboard.
The dashboard is where you manage scenes, Remote OBS, and your live output; your ingests live on the Ingests page.
5Connect IRL Pro to the Android ingest with the QR code
Open the ingest you want to use on the Ingests page (https://streamable.run/ingests) and select the IRL Pro (Android) option.
Reveal the QR code and scan it with your phone camera so IRL Pro imports the connection automatically.
Select the imported Streamable destination inside IRL Pro, then tap Start Streaming.
6Switch the Android ingest onto your live scene
Once the feed is stable, use the ingest-to-scene control in Streamable to place your IRL Pro feed on the live scene.
This makes your Android camera the main source your viewers see while Streamable continues handling the actual outgoing broadcast.
7Let Stream Drop Protection and the Offline Clips Player handle signal loss
When your Android connection drops, Streamable can automatically switch away from the missing ingest instead of ending the stream.
You can show an offline scene or run the offline clips player so viewers stay on the same stream and have something to watch while you recover signal.
When IRL Pro reconnects, you can switch straight back to your live Android feed.
8Start the stream to Twitch, Kick, YouTube, or other destinations
After your Android ingest is visible and your scene is ready, click Start Stream in Streamable.
Streamable sends the output to whichever destination platforms you already connected on the Destinations page.
9Add chat and alerts overlays with Streamlabs plus Remote OBS
Use Streamlabs to generate widget URLs for chat and alert overlays.
Open Remote OBS in Streamable, add a Browser Source, and paste the Streamlabs widget URL.
Repeat that for chat, alerts, or any other browser-based overlay you want on top of your Android feed.
Sources and references
10Add more scenes or ingests when your workflow grows
You can add browser sources, logos, videos, and other scene elements inside Remote OBS.
You can also switch between Android IRL Pro, desktop OBS, iPhone Moblin, LiveU, or other ingests depending on what part of the stream you are running.
This makes it much easier to do longer IRL streams without depending on a single phone connection the whole time.
Quick answers
Frequently asked questions
What Android app should I use for IRL streaming?
IRL Pro is a strong Android option for IRL streaming, especially when paired with a cloud-hosted streaming server such as Streamable.
Why not stream directly from IRL Pro to Twitch or Kick?
Direct streaming from the phone can end the broadcast when your mobile signal drops. Using Streamable as the middle layer keeps the stream alive while your Android phone reconnects.
What does the offline clips player do?
It gives viewers a fallback scene with clips or offline content during short outages, instead of dumping them out of the stream when your phone feed disappears.
Can I add chat and alerts without running OBS on my computer?
Yes. You can add Streamlabs widget URLs as Browser Sources inside Streamable Remote OBS, so the overlay workflow can stay fully browser-based.