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MemeBlip is a local-first Windows tray soundboard for games, calls, streams, and Discord. Search and import sounds, organize them into soundboards, assign hotkeys, preview clips locally, and route them through your mic path with VB-CABLE while keeping optional voice passthrough.
I built MemeBlip because I kept running into moments in games, Discord calls, and random meetings where a perfectly timed sound effect would make everything funnier.
Most soundboards either felt too bloated, too stream-focused, or not local-first enough for the way I wanted to use one. MemeBlip is my attempt at a simple Windows tray soundboard that stays out of the way, runs locally, supports hotkeys, and can route sounds through your mic path using VB-CABLE.
The current version lets you search/import sounds, organize soundboards, preview clips, assign hotkeys, and use optional mic passthrough so your voice and sound effects can share the same route.
Would love feedback from gamers, streamers, Discord users, and anyone who has ever thought: “this exact moment needs a sound effect.”
Tried it during a Discord call and the local preview with hotkeys worked exactly how i wanted. Routing through VB-CABLE was painless, no extra setup headaches.
Quick question: does VB-CABLE routing work smoothly with Discord without extra setup, or will I need to fiddle with audio device permissions each time?
finally tried it last night on discord with friends and the VB-cable routing just worked without me touching any settings, which is rare. hotkey search is snappy too
finally a soundboard that doesn't make me dig through nested menus. the tray search is super fast and routing through vb-cable just works without fiddling with settings every time.
Curious how the VB-CABLE routing actually plays with apps like Discord and games at the same time, any noticeable latency or conflict with the mic passthrough?
A local-first soundboard is exactly what I want, nice work. One thing that would make this a daily driver for me: per-sound fade in/out and a simple volume curve editor right inside the preview panel, so clips don't slap when dropped into a call or stream.
Love the local-first approach and VB-CABLE routing. One thing that would make it stickier for me is a quick "fade out the last 3 seconds" toggle on each clip so meme drops don't clip over teammates mid-call. Also nice if the hotkey overlay could dim itself after 5 seconds of inactivity.
How does the local-first setup actually handle importing larger sound packs without slowing down the tray app?
The local-first approach is a really underrated call here, especially for something that might fire off clips mid-game without you wanting random lag. Pairing that with VB-CABLE routing means it just stays out of your way until you actually need it.
How does the voice passthrough work in practice, do I need to set up VB-CABLE manually every time or does the app handle the routing on startup?
About MemeBlip — Soundboard for Chaos on Product Hunt
“Trigger meme sounds through your mic, locally.”
MemeBlip — Soundboard for Chaos was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 5 upvotes and 18 comments, placing #108 on the daily leaderboard. MemeBlip is a local-first Windows tray soundboard for games, calls, streams, and Discord. Search and import sounds, organize them into soundboards, assign hotkeys, preview clips locally, and route them through your mic path with VB-CABLE while keeping optional voice passthrough.
MemeBlip — Soundboard for Chaos was featured in Productivity (656.3k followers), GitHub (41.3k followers), Games (98.7k followers) and Audio (2.1k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 201.5k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted MemeBlip — Soundboard for Chaos?
MemeBlip — Soundboard for Chaos was hunted by Amaan Syed. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
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