Browse 8 real-scene Douyin / TikTok Live screenshot examples below, or describe your own livestream and let AI render a pixel-accurate screenshot in under 2 minutes.
Real-feel Douyin / TikTok Live room screenshots across 8 common scenes. Tap any thumbnail to load that scene into the AI generator below.
Above are 8 Douyin / TikTok Live stream screenshot examples covering the most common live-room scenes — beauty haul, fashion try-on, farm-direct selling, tech unboxing, food mukbang, fitness, gaming, knowledge sharing. Each example shows the live room interface with realistic viewer comments, viewer count, like count, and floating heart particles — exactly what a Douyin / TikTok Live stream looks like on a phone. Want a different scene? Describe it below and our AI generator writes dozens of authentic viewer comments and renders them inside a pixel-accurate live-room interface in under 2 minutes.
The pain it solves: "buzzing live room" visuals are huge demand assets for short-form video creators, training programs, e-commerce decks, and marketing teams. But typing 50 realistic comments takes 30+ minutes, and self-written comments tend to look "too clean" — missing the chaotic authenticity of real livestream chat. Our AI is trained on real livestream comment patterns: emoji, slang, abbreviations, follow-prompts, link-requests — instantly creating a "this room is on fire" feel.
Versus screen-recording a real livestream: no real streamer's identity exposed, full control over the comment narrative (positive vibe / skeptical vibe / hype vibe), and easy A/B testing of multiple variants for the best visual.
What does a Douyin / TikTok Live stream actually look like? A live room screenshot is a 9:16 portrait composition with 8 standard interface elements. Here's what every element does, so you know exactly what you're looking at — and what to look for in your own generated examples.
A pill-shaped capsule with the streamer's circular avatar, display name, the live room title in smaller text below, and a red "Follow" button. This is how viewers identify and follow the host. Tapping the avatar opens the streamer's profile.
Translucent dark pill showing real-time concurrent viewers (e.g. "123K"). The count updates every few seconds. Next to it sits a small round close button (×) to exit the live room.
Pink and red hearts drift upward from the right side every time a viewer taps the like button. Visual feedback for live engagement — a busy room shows a continuous stream of hearts.
Vertical stack of translucent dark pills, each showing "username: comment text" with the username in soft yellow. Comments scroll bottom-up. The most recent ~12 are visible; older ones fade off the top. This is where the live-room "chat energy" lives.
Vertical stack of 4 round translucent buttons on the right edge of the screen: Heart (with like count below), Comment, Gift, and Share. Each button has its number displayed beneath it. This column is always visible while watching.
The Gift button opens a panel of paid virtual gifts (rocket, yacht, supercar, rose) viewers send to the streamer in real time. Heart count and gift count are tracked separately. The Share button lets viewers forward the live room link to friends or other platforms.
Translucent rounded input field at the very bottom with placeholder text "Say something…". To its right are an emoji icon (for stickers and reactions) and a camera icon (for sending photos in chat).
During PK battles, a horizontal red-vs-blue bar appears at the top showing two streamers competing for gifts in real time. During commerce streams, a yellow shopping-cart icon ("product shelf") appears at the bottom-left — tapping it opens the linked products with prices and one-tap checkout.
Top users include short-form video creators, instructors, brand operators, and e-commerce teams. Eight typical scenarios:
Whole flow under 2 minutes.
Type a one-liner about the stream type: "beauty streamer trying on lipstick shades", "farmer livestream cutting fresh fruit", "tech reviewer unboxing the new phone". The more specific the description, the better the AI-generated comments fit the scene.
Pick how many comments you want (default 30, range 10-80) and click generate. AI returns a stream of authentic-feeling comments in 5-10 seconds, ordered bottom-up. Costs 10 credits per call.
Edit the streamer name, room title, viewer count ("123K"), like count ("886K"), upload a streamer avatar. Hand-edit individual comments in the comment editor, delete, or add. When ready, export the 1500×2668 PNG.
AI is trained on real livestream comment patterns: emoji, slang, link requests, hype-ups, follow-prompts. Output captures real-room energy.
Top streamer bar, follow button, viewer pill, right-side heart/gift/share column, scrolling comment stream, bottom input, floating hearts — all rendered to current Douyin / TikTok standards.
AI is a starting point. Every comment, username, room title, viewer count, like count is hand-editable.
13 hand-drawn cartoon-animal avatars for one-click streamer assignment, or upload your own image (≤2MB).
1500×2668 PNG — ready for vertical video PiP, mobile wallpapers, vertical posters, or print.
Chinese / English UI toggle and matching AI-generated comments — perfect for cross-border content.
TikTok / Douyin live-room screenshots are huge-demand content assets right now — for clip videos, training decks, marketing collateral, parody jokes, you name it. This AI tool gets you a vibey live-room screenshot in under 2 minutes.
New accounts get free credits to fully try it out.
Describe the livestream in one sentence — GPT Image 2 generates the entire Douyin / TikTok live-room screenshot (comments, host, scene).