The streaming space is advancing rapidly, and the tools for creators must keep up with that pace. At the Logitech G PLAY 2025 event, Streamlabs, in collaboration with NVIDIA and InWorld, launched its new Intelligent Streaming Agent, an assistant powered by artificial intelligence and RTX technologies, capable of acting as a co-presenter, producer, and technical support in live streams.
Traditionally, streamers have found themselves needing to juggle multiple roles at once — player, commentator, producer, and moderator — in addition to solving technical issues during their streams. This new agent seeks to change that dynamic by offering a real-time collaborator who can co-host using animated 3D avatars, produce the broadcast with automatic scene changes, and provide technical support without interrupting the live stream.
The integration of technologies such as NVIDIA ACE Audio2Face and DLSS enables 3D avatars to interact smoothly with the audience, keeping the conversation alive even during moments of silence from the audience. Jason Paul, Vice President of GeForce Platform Technology at NVIDIA, highlighted that this advanced integration enables creators to bring real-time intelligence to their streams, from their PCs equipped with NVIDIA GeForce RTX AI.
The evolution of streaming is also marked by the democratization of its resources. What used to require a complex setup with multiple pieces of equipment can now be carried out efficiently with a single computer thanks to NVIDIA encoding, the audio and video enhancements with NVIDIA Broadcast, and the optimizations for distribution on platforms such as Twitch and OBS.
Additionally, the Streamlabs agent uses real-time vision models to detect key events in games, such as eliminations or victories, enabling automatic and dynamic interaction in streams.
NVIDIA is also strengthening its creative ecosystem beyond streaming with generative AI and creation tools for RTX PCs, delivering significant performance gains and innovative capabilities to generate 3D content and edit images and videos.
This advance represents a significant step toward the intelligent automation of streaming, acting as a digital co-pilot that frees creators to focus on what matters: playing and connecting with their audience. The tool not only accompanies, but becomes an active, integral part of the streaming experience.
More information and references in Cloud News.


