Jerkmate is one of the most-searched cam brands, known for its AI matchmaker that pairs viewers with live performers. It doesn't run its own broadcaster — Jerkmate sources its live models from the Streamate network. You broadcast as a Streamate-network model and your show is distributed to Jerkmate and its partner sites. Because Streamate is pre-configured inside SplitCam's channel list, free SplitCam lets you add multi-camera scenes, overlays and filters with no manual RTMP entry.
SplitCam is free live-streaming software for Windows and macOS — no signup, no card, no watermark.
Open SplitCam and add your webcam. Layer in overlays, text, a second camera or your phone, beauty filters or an AI background — a strong scene converts Jerkmate's matched viewers.
Register through Jerkmate's model program or directly on the Streamate network that feeds it. Open SM Connect, accept the terms, click Start Show and copy your streaming key.
Open Stream Settings → Add Channel, pick Streamate from the built-in list and paste the key — no manual RTMP URL. Lock the resolution to 1080p.
Press Go Live in SplitCam — a green slider confirms the connection. Your show goes out across the Streamate network and appears on Jerkmate.
Don't look for a Jerkmate-specific broadcaster — you broadcast on Streamate and Jerkmate redistributes it. Anything that works for Streamate (SM Connect, the built-in SplitCam channel) works for Jerkmate.
Jerkmate's matchmaker funnels viewers to models who fit their picks — a polished SplitCam scene with overlays and good framing converts those matched viewers far better than a flat webcam.
Broadcasting to the Streamate network puts you on Jerkmate plus its partner sites simultaneously — wider reach from a single SplitCam stream, no extra setup.
Ethernet beats Wi-Fi for a long live show — a dropped frame is a dropped tip. Run a cable to the streaming PC.
Almost always the bitrate is higher than your upload can sustain. Run SplitCam's built-in speed test, then set the bitrate to about 75% of your measured upload — 3,500–6,000 Kbps for 1080p, lower for 720p. The lag clears once the encoder stops outrunning your connection.
Dropped frames mean packets aren't reaching Jerkmate in time — usually unstable Wi-Fi. Switch to a wired Ethernet connection, close bandwidth-heavy apps, and lower the bitrate a notch. One spike is fine; a steady climb means the connection can't keep up.
Your camera isn't selected as the active source in SplitCam, or another app is holding it. Close Zoom, Skype or OBS, pick your webcam again in SplitCam's source list, and confirm the preview shows your feed before you press Go Live.
Re-copy the stream key — a trailing space or an old, rotated key is the usual cause. Confirm the server URL matches the one Jerkmate shows and that external-encoder broadcasting is enabled on your account. A green slider in SplitCam's Stream Settings confirms a valid key.
Pick SplitCam as both the camera and the microphone, and select your real mic inside SplitCam's audio source. If audio drifts behind the video, lower the resolution one step — the encoder is overloaded and the audio is waiting on late frames.
No — Jerkmate sources live models from the Streamate network. You broadcast as a Streamate-network model via SM Connect, and your show appears on Jerkmate automatically.
Through SM Connect on the Streamate-network model side: accept terms → Start Show → copy the key. Paste it into SplitCam's built-in Streamate channel — no manual RTMP URL needed.
Lock 1080p at 30 fps. The network feed is adaptive, so a lower bitrate on a still shot is normal. Run SplitCam's speed test and use a wired connection.
Yes — SplitCam is free, no watermark and no time limit. Streamate (which feeds Jerkmate) is a built-in SplitCam channel, so there's no separate encoder cost.
Earnings on Jerkmate depend on audience size, hours streamed and tipping behaviour. Active broadcasters typically take home $200–$3,000 per month; top performers reach $10,000+. Your revenue share follows Jerkmate's commission structure — check the model agreement before going live.
Jerkmate requires age and ID verification before payout, which protects models from fraud. Use a stage name, never share personal data on camera, enable geo-blocks to hide your stream from your home region, and treat every viewer request as transactional. SplitCam's overlays and AI background can also hide or replace your real surroundings.
Jerkmate typically requires a government-issued photo ID (passport, driver's license or ID card), a selfie holding the ID, and a tax/payout form (W-9 for US, W-8BEN for non-US). Approval usually takes 24–72 hours; once approved you can go live the same day.
Jerkmate usually offers a mobile broadcaster app or a mobile-web broadcaster, but the experience is limited — no overlays, no second camera, no AI background. For full production quality, broadcast from a computer with SplitCam and use your phone as a second camera (SplitCam accepts IP-camera input from phones).
Yes — Jerkmate provides an RTMP server URL and a stream key in the broadcaster panel. Paste both into SplitCam's Stream Settings → Custom RTMP, set 1920×1080 at 30 fps with a 4,000–5,000 Kbps bitrate, and click Go Live. The Custom RTMP route gives you full SplitCam scene composition (multi-camera, overlays, filters).
Free software. No watermark, no signup. Set up once, go live in one click.
⬇ Download SplitCam