Spoon: Live & PodNovel

Spoon’s gift economy is divisive. New DJs come in expecting Twitch-style growth and discover that the path to top-tier ranking runs through paid star balloons, not skill at hosting. The PodNovel side works for casual listening, but it sits awkwardly next to the live audio feed and most listeners pick one mode or the other. If you are a creator looking for faster audience growth, or a listener tired of constant gift prompts, these Spoon alternatives are worth the switch.

We tested seven live audio and live streaming apps that overlap with Spoon’s use case, from drop-in audio rooms to virtual-avatar broadcasting to the biggest creator platforms on Android. Each section covers pricing, what migrates from Spoon, and who the app is right for.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planPaid tierStandout feature
Bigo LiveMost direct Spoon swapYesCoin packsMulti-guest live audio rooms with a strong gift economy
DiscordFree voice roomsYesNitro at $9.99/moStage Channels inside the largest community platform
ClubhouseDrop-in audio talksYesNoneTopic-based rooms with quick discovery
MirrativStreaming without a faceYesCoin packsVirtual avatars and game broadcasting in one app
AfreecaTV (SOOP)Korean live sceneYesStar balloonsLong-running creator economy that predates Spoon
17LIVEAsia-focused liveYesCoin packsDJ interaction tools like duets and battles
TwitchLargest creator platformYesTurbo at $8.99/moJust Chatting category supports audio-only streams

Why people leave Spoon

The reasons we hear most often, from app store reviews and Reddit threads about Spoon Radio, come down to four patterns.

The diamond-to-cash conversion is rough on small creators. Spoon’s listener-to-streamer rewards depend on how aggressively your audience sends paid gifts. Users on Reddit and review platforms describe long days streaming for modest payouts, and the reward curve is steepest for top-tier livers.

Discovery favors established DJs. Multiple reviewers point out that the Popular tab is dominated by the same accounts, and the Debut tab rewards activity volume more than content quality. Spoon’s own marketing copy admits as much: the app says explicitly it will not make you famous, and that aspiring influencers should stay on TikTok and Instagram.

The Western user pool is small. Spoon is global on paper but its centre of gravity remains Korea and Japan, with a thinner US and European audience. English-speaking creators report broadcasting in unsocial hours to overlap with their listeners.

PodNovel and live audio do not share an audience well. PodNovel listeners want a podcast app and live audio listeners want a community. Stitching them into one app leaves each side feeling thinner than a dedicated alternative.

The alternatives

Bigo Live, closest match to Spoon’s gift-driven model

Bigo Live is the closest swap if what you liked about Spoon was the gift-driven live audio model. It carries a much larger global audience, supports multi-guest audio rooms, and the coin economy works on the same logic as Spoon’s stars with a larger spending pool. Audio-only and video streams sit in the same feed, so audio creators are not locked out of mainstream discovery.

Where it falls short: moderation has been an ongoing concern, especially for women streamers. The Bigo Live vs Spoon question turns on how much that matters to you. Bigo’s gift prompts during streams can also be more aggressive than Spoon’s.

Pricing:

Migrating from Spoon: there is no direct importer. Existing fans follow you on Bigo manually. Run a few cross-promo Spoon streams before you switch, and link your Bigo profile in your Spoon bio while the account is still active.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: pick Bigo Live if you want the biggest audience pool with a Spoon-like reward model, and you are prepared to moderate your room actively.

Discord, the free option with Stage Channels

Discord is the obvious free pick. Stage Channels give you a one-to-many audio room with hosts, speakers, and listeners, and the community side is far deeper than any dedicated audio app. You can host scheduled audio events, run a permanent text channel for the same audience, and never charge listeners a cent.

Where it falls short: Discord is not a creator monetization platform. There is no built-in gift economy, no equivalent of star balloons, and no in-app payout. If your Spoon income matters, Discord is a community tool, not a replacement income source.

Pricing:

Migrating from Spoon: post your Discord invite link in your Spoon stream titles and pinned comments before announcing the move. Run your first few Stage events on a fixed weekly slot so listeners build a habit around it.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: pick Discord if you want a free home for your community and you can monetize elsewhere through Patreon, Ko-fi, or merchandise.

Clubhouse, drop-in audio without the gift pressure

Clubhouse is the dedicated drop-in audio app that defined the format. It is still around, the topic-based rooms are easy to discover, and it does one thing well: scheduled and ad-hoc audio talks that anyone can join as a speaker. There is no gift economy, which keeps the experience focused on conversation rather than monetization.

Where it falls short: the post-2021 hype crash left Clubhouse with a smaller active user base than its peak. The Clubhouse vs Spoon comparison depends on whether you want focused conversations with a smaller pool or a busier feed with gift prompts.

Pricing:

Migrating from Spoon: create a club around topics you already cover on Spoon. Schedule recurring rooms in your time zone and invite your Spoon followers via your bio and last few streams.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: pick Clubhouse if you came to Spoon for the conversation and the gift pressure was the dealbreaker.

Mirrativ, streaming without showing your face

Mirrativ is a Japanese live streaming app with a virtual avatar feature called Emomo, which lets you broadcast as an animated character that mirrors your voice and expressions. For Spoon DJs who like audio because they do not want to be on camera, Mirrativ keeps the privacy of audio while giving you a visual presence. It supports game streaming and voice-only rooms in the same app.

Where it falls short: the audience skews Japanese, which is a benefit if your Spoon audience already overlapped there and a problem if it did not. The English UI exists but the community side is text-light for non-Japanese speakers.

Pricing:

Migrating from Spoon: announce the move on Spoon a week ahead and share your Mirrativ profile link. The first few streams will likely have small audiences while followers find you, so plan for a slow ramp.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: pick Mirrativ if you want the avatar route into live streaming and you do not mind a Japanese-leaning audience.

AfreecaTV (SOOP), the Korean live streaming peer

AfreecaTV, now rebranded as SOOP globally, predates Spoon in the Korean live streaming scene by more than a decade. It supports live audio rooms, video streaming, and a star balloon gift economy similar to Spoon’s stars. If your Spoon listeners were in Korea, this is the most likely place to find them again.

Where it falls short: the international UI experience lags the Korean app. The global SOOP brand split has also led to some user confusion about which app to install in which region.

Pricing:

Migrating from Spoon: if you streamed in Korean, expect a smoother transition than to a Western app. Set up your AfreecaTV profile with the same handle if available and cross-post your schedule on both apps for a few weeks.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: pick AfreecaTV if your audience is Korean and you want the longest-running gift-economy alternative to Spoon.

17LIVE, Asia-focused live with stronger interaction tools

17LIVE is a Taiwan-headquartered live streaming app strong across East and Southeast Asia. It blends video and audio streams with a coin and gift system, and its DJ interaction tools, including duet streams and battles, give creators more ways to engage listeners than Spoon’s stream-and-react model.

Where it falls short: the Western user pool is small, smaller in some markets than Spoon’s. The 17LIVE vs Spoon question depends on which Asian market you stream into. If your Spoon listeners are mainly Japanese or Taiwanese, 17LIVE has a denser creator base there.

Pricing:

Migrating from Spoon: apply to 17LIVE’s verified creator program if you have a meaningful follower count. The verified path unlocks the better monetization tools that put 17LIVE ahead of Spoon for active streamers.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: pick 17LIVE if your Spoon following sits in Taiwan, Japan, or Southeast Asia and you want a comparable reward model.

Twitch, the largest creator economy

Twitch is video-first, but the Just Chatting category and audio-only streams are a real part of the platform. The total active audience is multiple orders of magnitude larger than Spoon’s, and the monetization stack (subs, bits, ads, sponsorships) gives full-time creators more revenue paths than Spoon’s stars alone.

Where it falls short: discoverability for new audio-only streamers is brutal in a sea of game streamers. The Twitch vs Spoon trade-off is reach versus niche: more potential audience, less concentration on audio listeners specifically.

Pricing:

Migrating from Spoon: simulcast on Twitch for a few weeks before switching exclusively. Use your Spoon stream description to point listeners to your Twitch handle.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: pick Twitch if you are willing to build a new audience for the larger upside, and you can market yourself outside the app to break through.

How to choose

Pick Bigo Live if you want the closest Spoon experience with a larger global audience. The reward model is similar enough that your habits transfer, and the audience pool is the biggest of the Spoon-like apps.

Pick Discord if monetization through the app does not matter. It is free, the community tools are unmatched, and you can earn through Patreon or merch separately.

Pick Clubhouse if the gift economy was the part of Spoon that wore you out. Drop-in audio rooms without monetization pressure are a different experience.

Pick Mirrativ if you want avatar-based streaming with a Japanese-leaning audience.

Pick AfreecaTV (SOOP) if your Spoon following was Korean. The reward model is closest, and your audience is most likely already there.

Pick 17LIVE if your audience is in Taiwan, Japan, or Southeast Asia.

Pick Twitch if you are ready to build a new audience for far larger upside.

Stay on Spoon if you primarily use PodNovel for audio fiction, or your listener community is loyal and dependably tips. The PodNovel catalogue has no clean equivalent on the live audio alternatives.

FAQ

Is Bigo Live better than Spoon?

Bigo Live has a larger global audience and a similar gift-based reward model. For creators looking to monetize through audience tips, Bigo offers more reach than Spoon. For listeners, Spoon’s interface is calmer and less monetization-heavy.

Can I import my Spoon followers to a new app?

No. None of the alternatives offer a direct import from Spoon. You need to cross-promote on Spoon before switching, and link your new profile from your Spoon bio while the account is still active.

What is the cheapest Spoon alternative?

Discord and Clubhouse are both free with no required paid tier. Discord adds optional Nitro at $9.99 a month for higher upload limits and HD streaming, but the core voice and Stage Channel features are free.

Is there a free version of Spoon?

Yes. Spoon itself is free to download and use. The paid layer is coins, which listeners buy to send gifts to streamers. Listening, commenting, and streaming itself are free.

What do creators use instead of Spoon for live audio?

The most common alternatives for creators are Bigo Live for similar monetization, Discord for community-only audio without gift pressure, and Twitch for those willing to expand into video for larger reach.

Does Spoon work outside Korea?

Yes. Spoon is global and the apps are translated into multiple languages. The active creator and listener pools are densest in Korea and Japan, with a smaller user base in the US, UK, and other markets.