MrBeast launched a clipping platform. If you clip for a living, or you want to, pay attention. The guy who reverse-engineered the YouTube algorithm harder than anyone alive is now paying people to cut clips. It's called Vyro, it went live in October 2025 through his Viewstats company, and half of clip Twitter hasn't shut up about it since.
So here's the honest breakdown. What Vyro actually is, what it really pays (the real rate, not the "I made $8k in my sleep" screenshots), how it stacks up against Whop, and where it fits if you already clip. I run a clipping tool and a directory of paid campaigns, so I watch this stuff every day. No hype.
What Vyro actually is
Vyro is a content rewards marketplace. The model's been around since 2024 (Whop is what popularized it), and it's dead simple:
- A brand or creator funds a campaign with a fixed budget and posts a brief.
- They hand you the source (a stream VOD, a podcast, a Beast Games episode) and the rules.
- You cut clips and post them to your own TikTok, Reels and Shorts accounts.
- Vyro tracks the views across all three, combined, and pays you per 1,000 views until the budget runs dry.
What makes Vyro different from a random rewards board is the name on the door. MrBeast and Mark Rober were the first creators posting campaigns, and MrBeast has already paid out over $100,000 to people clipping Beast Games. When the biggest creator on the planet is funding the pool, brands pay attention, and that pulls in bigger budgets than a no-name board can attract.
The catch is the same one everywhere. A high-status platform means more clippers fighting for the same slots. More eyeballs on the opportunity, more competition for the budget.
How much Vyro actually pays
Here's the number you came for. Vyro's headline rate is $3 per 1,000 views, and here's the part most articles skip: that's your views on TikTok, Reels and Shorts combined. Post the same clip on all three, the counts stack, you get paid on the total.
That $3 CPM is genuinely good for this space. For context, YouTube's Partner Program pays roughly $0.50 to $2 per 1,000, and TikTok's Creator Fund is pennies. The wider content-rewards market runs $0.50 to $5 depending on the campaign, so Vyro sits at the healthy end of it.
But there's a ceiling you have to know about: payouts cap at around $1,000 per clip. That changes the whole math.
Do the numbers on a single clip:
- 50,000 combined views at $3/1k = $150.
- 200,000 views = $600.
- ~333,000 views = $1,000, and that's the cap.
- 2,000,000 views = still $1,000. Your monster viral clip earns the same as one that did 333k.
So on Vyro, a single clip going nuclear doesn't make you rich. The winning move isn't one lottery-ticket clip, it's ten clips that each clear a few hundred thousand views. Volume beats the jackpot here, and that's by design.
The payout side is refreshingly clean, though. Vyro updates your earnings roughly hourly, and you cash out via PayPal, crypto or bank transfer. No net-30, no waiting on a brand to approve an invoice. That alone puts it ahead of a lot of the Discord-run campaigns where you're DMing a mod for your money three weeks late.
One caveat: not every campaign is a flat $3. Brands write their own briefs and some pools pay more or less depending on how badly they want the reach. But $3/1k with a $1k cap is the number Vyro built its reputation on, so use it as your baseline.
Realistic monthly earnings
Stop measuring yourself against the top-1% screenshots. Here's what actually happens:
- Beginner, month 1: you're learning hooks and pacing, most clips die under a few thousand views. Expect $0 to $50. Normal. Don't quit here.
- Consistent clipper, month 2 to 4: posting daily, running 3 to 5 campaigns, studying what already popped. $300 to $1,500/mo.
- Serious operator: multiple accounts, fast turnaround, you know which formats print. $1,500 to $5,000/mo, with the occasional clip capping out at $1,000 on its own.
- Top clippers: yeah, a few clear $8k to $10k+. They treat it like a full-time job with a system, and they got in early before the pools crowded up. Survivorship bias is very real.
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Two caps that quietly kill your earnings
Vyro has two ceilings, and beginners walk straight into both.
The per-clip cap. Like I said, roughly $1,000 max per clip, no matter how viral it goes. Plan around it. One clip can't carry your month, so you post volume.
The campaign budget. Every campaign has a total pool. Once it's paid out, the campaign closes and your late clips earn nothing, even if they blow up next week. Timing beats effort. A clip up in the first 48 hours of a fresh, well-funded campaign is worth more than a better clip posted after the pool's drained. Watch for fresh drops and move fast.
Vyro review: the good and the annoying
What's good:
- $3/1k combined across three platforms is a strong, transparent rate. No guessing what you'll earn.
- Hourly tracking, cash out to PayPal or crypto. You actually watch the money move.
- Pay-per-view means no following required. A 3-day-old account can win if the clip is good.
- MrBeast and Mark Rober attached means real budgets and cleaner payouts than the sketchy boards.
What's annoying:
- The ~$1,000 per-clip cap kneecaps your biggest wins.
- It's newer, so fewer campaigns are live at once than the established boards.
- The prestige means more competition per slot.
- Budget caps close campaigns fast, so you're always chasing the next drop.
Honestly? Vyro belongs in your rotation, not as your whole income. Leaning on one platform is how you get wrecked the day a campaign dries up. Same lesson as monetizing a stream: diversify or you're done.
Vyro vs Whop: the real comparison
This is the matchup everyone's Googling. Whop's Content Rewards is the incumbent, the board most clippers cut their teeth on. Straight read:
| Vyro | Whop Content Rewards | |
|---|---|---|
| Backing | MrBeast / Viewstats | Whop marketplace |
| Standard rate | ~$3 / 1k, combined across TikTok+Reels+Shorts | Set per campaign, ~$0.50 to $5 / 1k |
| Per-clip cap | ~$1,000 | Varies, many have no hard cap |
| Live campaigns right now | Fewer, more curated | Many, always something open |
| Payouts | Hourly tracking, PayPal / crypto / bank | Per campaign, usually solid |
| Track record | Newer (Oct 2025) | Longer, well-documented |
| Best for | Clean rate + big-name reach | Getting started + volume |
The verdict: if you want the most shots on goal today, Whop has more campaigns live. If you want a transparent $3 rate and MrBeast-level reach, and you can live with the $1k cap, Vyro is worth watching. Serious clippers run both. Picking one is leaving money on the table.
Vyro alternatives and competitors
The paid-clip world is bigger than two names. Your real competitor set:
- Whop Content Rewards. The main alternative, covered above.
- Direct brand campaigns. Loads of creators and brands run their own paid clip programs straight through Discord or Skool, no middleman platform. Often the highest CPMs because there's no marketplace fee, but they're scattered, hard to find, and you're chasing a mod for payment.
- Agency clipping programs. Private pools run by talent agencies. Steadier, lower ceiling, and they take a cut. Read what agencies won't tell you before you sign anything.
- Native creator funds. TikTok, Shorts and Reels pay their own money on top of campaign pay, so a single clip can earn twice.
The problem with all of it? These campaigns live in fifty different places. Vyro over here, Whop over there, a brand's Discord you've never heard of, a Skool community with the best CPM on the market that you'll never stumble into. You end up spending more time hunting campaigns than actually clipping.
Where our directory fits (the honest pitch)
That's exactly the problem we built /discover to solve. It aggregates paid clip campaigns from across the ecosystem, Vyro, Whop and direct brand programs, into one feed, so you stop tab-hopping and just see what's paying right now.
Want your lane? Jump straight to TikTok campaigns if that's where you post, gaming campaigns if you clip streamers, or music campaigns if you cut artist and label content. Fresh campaigns get flagged as they drop, which is the whole game when budgets cap out this fast.
Free to browse. No login wall to see what's live.
1 email per week, zero bullshit.
2026 viral techniques, AI tools worth using, new TikTok formats that work. No spam, no aggressive pitch.
How to actually make money clipping in 2026
The platform matters less than the craft. Vyro, Whop or a brand's Discord, the same three things separate the $50 clippers from the $2,000 ones:
- Hook in the first second. If your first frame doesn't stop the thumb, the CPM is irrelevant because nobody watches. This is 80% of the outcome.
- Volume with intent. Post daily, but study what's already winning in each campaign. Copy the structure, not the exact clip. On Vyro especially, with that $1k cap, volume is the whole strategy.
- Speed on fresh drops. Get in before the pool crowds up. A mediocre clip on a fresh $10k campaign beats a great clip on a drained one.
The clipping itself, cutting the VOD, framing vertical, burning in captions that actually read on mobile, that's the grunt work that eats your hours. That's the part we automate. StreamClipping turns a long stream or video into ready-to-post vertical clips with animated captions, so you spend your time picking winners and posting fast instead of scrubbing timelines. Point it at a source, get clips, drop them on the campaigns you found in /discover. That's the loop.
You can try it free, 15 minutes of video a month for life, no card. Cut a few clips, grab a campaign, see if the math works for you. That's the only honest way to find out.
Keep reading:
- How much clippers actually earn in 2026 the real numbers across every platform, not just Vyro
- StreamClipping vs OpusClip in 2026 which clipper actually helps you win campaigns
- How to turn 1 Twitch stream into 30 viral clips more source material, more shots at the budget
- What big agencies won't tell you before you hand over a cut of your clip income
If you want to talk clipping strategy, I'm live on twitch.tv/ragnarlebroc most evenings.
Built with love, by a streamer for streamers. Ragnarlebroc.
