Twitch, Kick, Whop, and Dribbble are live on Schedulin


Four more networks just went live on Schedulin: Twitch, Kick, Whop, and Dribbble. You can connect them today and schedule to them from the same calendar you already use for everything else.
These four don't look much alike — two are livestream chats, one is a community forum, one is a design portfolio. But they have the same thing in common as the rest: showing up consistently matters, and "I'll post that later" rarely survives contact with a busy week.
Twitch and Kick
If you stream, you already know the drill: the "going live in 30" message, the schedule for the week, the reminder about tonight's collab. Now you can queue those to your channel's chat ahead of time.
- Twitch supports both regular chat messages and highlighted announcements — pick the announcement banner color right in the composer.
- Kick posts a chat message to your channel.
Both are text-only (chat has no attachments), and both cap at 500 characters — so they're built for reminders and shout-outs, not essays.
Whop
For creators running a paid community on Whop, you can now schedule forum posts — text, an optional title, and image or file attachments — into a forum in your Whop. Keep the community warm with a scheduled prompt, a weekly recap, or a drop announcement, without logging in to do it by hand.
You'll paste the forum's Experience ID into the composer (it's in your Whop dashboard URL). A proper picker is on the list.
Dribbble
Designers: you can now schedule shots. Attach a single image at 400×300 or 800×600 (or the 2x versions), give it a title, and Schedulin publishes it as a shot with your caption as the description. Line up a week of work-in-progress and let it post itself.
How to try it
- Sign in (or start a 7-day free trial).
- Open the Channels page.
- Click Connect a channel and pick Twitch, Kick, Whop, or Dribbble.
- Complete the OAuth flow, open the composer, and schedule a post.
Same composer, same calendar, four more networks. If anything feels off — the connect flow, a field in the composer, the way a post lands — email me. I read every one.
— Troy