SleekPixel for Twitch affiliates: schedule and stream cards
Twitch affiliates juggle stream schedules, going-live alerts, new-clip shares, and sub goals. SleekPixel turns each schedule post and clip page on your WordPress site into a clean Twitter card that shows the time, the game, and your streamer brand on every published share to the timeline.
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Streamer cards on every schedule page
A Twitch affiliate site typically runs a WordPress install with a stream_event custom post type for upcoming streams, a clip_share CPT for highlight reels, and a steady feed of stream recap posts about sub-only events, charity drives, and viewer game nights. Each one needs a 1200 by 675 Twitter card that fits the streamer brand with the same color, the same channel mark, and the same handle across every share on the timeline.
SleekPixel reads the post title, the _stream_time, the _game_played, and any custom _sub_goal meta, then renders a 1200 by 675 Twitter card with the streamer accent color and the channel logo. The image regenerates automatically when the schedule post is updated, so a time shift or a game change does not leave a stale graphic on the Twitter timeline or the Discord embed preview shared in the streamer community server channel.
Because the rendered PNG lives at a stable URL tied to the post, the schedule card on Twitter is the same one that shows on the Discord server embed, in the streamer email newsletter, on the channel website link card preview, and in the Google OG result for the stream event page, keeping the streamer look consistent without ever opening OBS or Photoshop to render a thumbnail.
Workflow
From schedule post to streamer Twitter card
Pick a streamer template
Map stream meta keys
Publish the stream event
_stream_time and the game in _game_played, then hit publish and SleekPixel renders the card automatically with no OBS or Photoshop step required.
Share to Twitter and Discord
Output
Sample Twitch going-live card
A wide Twitter card for a going-live stream event page. Stream time, game played, sub goal progress, and the channel handle render from the WordPress stream event post meta.
Comparison
Default theme OG image vs SleekPixel for Twitch affiliate
Default theme OG image
- Reuses one channel banner across every stream event and clip share page on the affiliate site
- Cannot show the stream time, the game played, or the sub goal progress on the share card itself
- Misses the Twitter 1.91 to 1 aspect crop and renders as a flat 1200 by 630 OG banner only
-
Cannot read
_stream_timeor_game_playedmeta on the stream event post - Demands OBS or Photoshop work for every schedule post, clip share, or sub goal alert page
SleekPixel
-
Reads
_stream_time,_game_played, and_sub_goalmeta automatically each time - Renders a 1200 by 675 Twitter-ready PNG at every published Twitch affiliate stream event post on the site
- Keeps streamer accent color, channel mark, and handle placement stable across every share card
- Regenerates the image on post update so a time shift never leaves a stale graphic on the timeline
- Works on stream CPTs registered by ACF, JetEngine, Custom Post Type UI, or any custom plugin
Features
What SleekPixel gives you for Twitch affiliate
Going-live cards
Every stream event post produces a wide card with the stream time, the game played, and the sub goal progress. The card is ready for Twitter, the Discord server embed, and the streamer newsletter the moment the affiliate hits publish on the WordPress stream event page.
Weekly schedule pages
Weekly stream schedule pages render a branded card showing the days, the times, and the games for the upcoming week, all pulled from the same WordPress post meta the streamer already maintains in the dashboard for each weekly schedule page on the site.
Clip and highlight posts
New clip and highlight reel posts automatically share with a streamer-styled card so the feed looks like one cohesive channel rather than ten random OBS screenshots from various unrelated stream sessions or one-off clip moments saved for the community.
Use cases
Where Twitch affiliates put their SleekPixel cards to work
Going-live alerts
Share the going-live stream event page on Twitter the moment the stream starts and the same card appears in the Discord server embed and the streamer newsletter with time and game all clearly visible at a glance.
Weekly schedule promos
Weekly schedule pages render a clean wide card with days and games so prospective viewers see what is coming at a glance without zooming into the image preview to read the stream schedule grid first.
Clip share posts
New clip share posts share with a wide card pulling the clip title and the streamer handle, keeping the channel brand stable across every highlight share on Twitter or Discord embed feed for the community.
The bigger picture
Why Twitch affiliates need consistent stream cards
Twitch affiliates compete for attention on a packed timeline. A clean Twitter feed of branded going-live cards, weekly schedule promos, and clip shares signals that the streamer runs a serious channel with a real schedule, while a feed of mismatched OBS screenshots and inconsistent crops reads as a casual stream that may not deliver on a hyped sub goal night. The hard part is that streaming work leaves almost no time for graphic design, especially when a going-live alert, a weekly schedule update, and a new clip share all need their own share images in the same week as a packed stream calendar across multiple games and community events.
SleekPixel removes that work entirely. Every stream event page, every weekly schedule listing, every clip share post renders a wide card that uses the streamer accent color, the channel mark, and the streamer handle in the same place every single time. Followers scrolling Twitter see a feed that looks like a real channel with a real schedule and a real visual identity.
Discord community members see an embed that matches the channel they joined originally. Search engines pulling the OG image for a stream event page see the same streamer identity reinforced. The cumulative effect over a year of weekly posts is a feed that feels like one cohesive channel rather than fifty graphics from fifty different OBS sessions, and that consistency is what turns a casual viewer into a paid sub on the next stream.
Questions
Common questions about SleekPixel for Twitch affiliate
Yes. SleekPixel maps to any registered WordPress taxonomy including a game_played taxonomy, so a stream event post renders a card with the correct game label, the streamer handle, and the stream time every time the stream event page is published or updated on the affiliate site.
Yes. SleekPixel regenerates the rendered PNG whenever the stream event post is updated, so a time push, a game change, or a sub goal update always produces a fresh share card with no stale graphic lingering on the Twitter timeline or any embedded Discord channel preview anywhere on the server.
 Yes. If stream events are categorized by taxonomy or post meta, SleekPixel can switch the accent color and the streamer mark per category so a charity stream card looks distinct from a sub-only stream card even on the same WordPress install for the same Twitch affiliate channel brand identity.
 Twitter share posts pull the OG image at a 1.91 to 1 aspect, typically 1200 by 675 for the card. SleekPixel renders at that exact size with safe-area padding so the stream time and game stay readable when Twitter crops the preview thumbnail in the user timeline and any embedded reply thread.
 Yes. SleekPixel reads multi-value meta fields and ACF repeaters so a stream event post listing three co-streamer handles for a community game night can render a single card with each handle visible on the share image preview without truncating any of the co-streamer names listed in post meta.
 Yes. The rendered card lives at a stable URL under the stream event post, so the streamer can right-click and save the PNG, drop it into an OBS scene as a stream-starting image, or include it inline in a community Discord channel without needing a separate Photoshop export step at any point.
 
SleekPixel works with any registered WordPress post type, including CPTs created by JetEngine, Pods, Custom Post Type UI, or ACF. Point it at the stream_event CPT and the card pulls the stream time, the game, and the sub goal the same way it would for a normal WordPress post or page.
Yes. SleekPixel can render off the WooCommerce product post type for a paid sub-tier perk listing. The card uses the product title, the price, and any custom meta like _sub_tier the same way it would for a standard WordPress stream event or clip share post on the affiliate site.
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