COMPARISON · UPDATED JUNE 2026

VoxisLive vs StreamVox: hear it, or read it?

Both offer real-time translation on Windows, but they solve different problems. StreamVox displays live captions on screen. VoxisLive speaks the translation aloud in a natural voice — no reading required. If you need eyes-free translation of any Windows audio, that distinction decides everything.

FeatureVoxisLiveStreamVox
Output formatSpoken voice (speech-to-speech)Live subtitles / captions
Audio captureWASAPI driverless — no virtual cableRequires virtual audio device
Meeting botNoNo
Languages7949+
Free optionBYOK build — $0, open sourcePaid (see streamvox.pro)
Managed pricingPrepaid packs from $6.99 · no subscriptionPaid
DistributionMicrosoft Store + GitHub (BYOK)Direct download

StreamVox language count and feature set per StreamVox's public website, as of June 2026.

The main difference: output modality

StreamVox is a captions tool: it listens to audio and renders translated text on your screen as subtitles — a well-established approach, especially if you want a readable transcript alongside the original audio.

VoxisLive captures the incoming audio, translates it, and speaks the translation back through your speakers or headphones in a natural voice. No subtitle overlay, no second thing to watch. That suits situations where your eyes are occupied — gaming, video, live presentations — and accessibility scenarios where reading captions isn't practical.

A secondary difference is capture: VoxisLive uses Windows WASAPI directly, so no virtual audio cable or loopback driver is required. StreamVox requires a virtual audio device, which works once configured but adds install steps and can conflict with exclusive-mode devices, ASIO drivers or multi-output setups.

Which should you choose?

Choose VoxisLive if you want to hear translated content rather than read it; you want zero-friction setup with no virtual drivers; you want a genuinely free tier (the open-source BYOK build costs $0 with your own Gemini key); you translate meetings without a bot; or you play games and want translated dialogue without leaving the action.

Choose StreamVox if you specifically need on-screen captions, a caption history, or a transcript-style reading experience. (VoxisLive also offers an optional caption overlay and TXT/SRT/VTT transcript export, but its core output is the spoken voice.)

Both are legitimate Windows translation utilities. The decision comes down to whether you want to read the translation or hear it.

FAQ

Common questions

01Does VoxisLive show subtitles like StreamVox?
VoxisLive's core output is a spoken voice, not captions — though an optional on-screen overlay and exportable transcript exist. StreamVox renders translated text on screen as live captions.
02Does VoxisLive need a virtual audio cable?
No. VoxisLive captures system audio directly through the Windows WASAPI API — no VB-Cable, Voicemeeter or any virtual device. StreamVox requires a virtual audio device for system capture.
03Is VoxisLive free?
There is a genuinely free path: the open-core BYOK build on GitHub costs $0 — you supply your own Google Gemini API key. The managed Store app uses prepaid minute packs (from $6.99, no subscription) and gives every new account 10 free minutes.
Free to try · 10 minutes on us

Hear every language, in real time.

Runs on Windows 10 and 11 — no drivers, no setup ritual, no bot in your call.