7 Days to Die is a game you can enjoy both “solo and at your own pace” and “together with a crowd.” When you start streaming, deciding what style you’ll play in ahead of time saves you from scrambling on the day.
On this page, we’ve organized things so you can choose your streaming style in three steps: ① the broad style → ② the recruitment method for participation → ③ what to decide regardless of style.
If you’re unsure, we recommend the order “first get comfortable solo or with friends → move to participation once you’re used to it.” Opening it up to anyone right away tends to leave you chasing after trolls with no time left for actual streaming.
① First, Decide the Broad Shape of Your Stream
Whether you have viewers “just watch” or “play along with you” makes a big difference in both preparation and atmosphere.
| Style | Description | Pros | Watch Out For | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fully Solo | Viewers only watch. You play by yourself | Zero accidents, stable progression, you can focus on commentary | Interaction tends to be thin. Keeping things lively depends on your commentary skills | People who want to get used to streaming itself first |
| Playing with Friends | Play together with people you know | Good chemistry and easy coordination, few problems | Viewers can easily get left behind by inside-joke vibes. Decide in advance whether to include your friends’ voices in the stream | People who have friends to play with |
| Viewer Participation | Invite viewers onto the server to play together | The most exciting, rich interaction, tends to build repeat viewers | Requires managing trolls, identity, and means of contact (→ see ②) | People who want to prioritize interaction with viewers |
About friends’ voices: Putting your friends’ voices on the stream makes it livelier, but as inside conversations increase, it becomes harder for viewers to join in. Deciding to “give commentary in a way viewers can follow” and “respond when spoken to” keeps the inside-joke vibe from taking over. If you don’t include their voices, be the one to pick things up and take on the commentator role yourself.
② For Participation, Decide Your “Recruitment Method”
With participation, there’s a trade-off: the higher you set the barrier to entry, the safer it is (harder for trolls) / the lower you set it, the easier it is to draw a crowd. Choose based on how much you can manage.
| Recruitment Type | Who Can Join | Ease of Setup | Troll Prevention | Barrier to Entry | For This Kind of Stream |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Designated Members Only | Invite only people whose identity is known, who have joined your Discord or similar | Slow | ◎ Strong | High | Wanting to absolutely avoid accidents / play with peace of mind among a close-knit group |
| Reinforced (VC Required) | Only people you can reach immediately, who have joined a Discord voice channel | Very slow | ◎ Strong | High | Wanting to coordinate closely / respond to trouble instantly |
| Balanced (In-Game VC) | Only people who can use in-game voice chat | Normal | ○ Moderate | Low | Wanting easy interaction / wanting to stay in contact but lower the bar |
| Free Participation | No conditions, anyone can join | ◎ Fast | △ Weak | Lowest | Prioritizing liveliness above all (※ assumes frequent monitoring) |
Tips for troll prevention: The lower you set the barrier, the more participants you’ll get, but you’ll need corresponding safeguards such as “restricting claims (destroying others’ buildings) in the server settings,” “whitelist / password,” and “telling the passphrase only on stream.” If you’re going with free participation, having your kick and ban controls ready at hand gives you peace of mind.
③ What to Decide Regardless of Style
Once your style and recruitment method are set, declaring the following two points up front reduces trouble.
| Decision Point | Options | Suitability / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fight together? Or go separate ways? | Cooperative: build bases and defend together | Requires coordination, so it pairs well ◎ with VC-oriented types (Reinforced, Balanced). Exciting, but giving instructions is demanding |
| Separate action: everyone explores and builds freely on their own | Easy to let people join loosely. That said, you’ll need to keep an eye on people acting on their own | |
| Server access outside of streams? | Allowed only during streams | Safe within your line of sight. Easy to manage |
| Always open for access | Makes it easier for a community to grow, but carries the risk of accidents and trolls while you’re not watching. For trusted members |
Example combinations
- 🟢 Safety-focused: Playing with Friends or Designated-Members participation + Cooperative + During streams only
- 🟡 Interaction-focused: Balanced (In-Game VC) + Separate action OK + During streams only
- 🔴 Liveliness above all: Free Participation + Separate action + Always open (※ assumes a monitoring and ban system)
Summary: Expanding Gradually Is the Safe Way
- Get used to streaming controls and game progression with Fully Solo
- Get a feel for “what it’s like to stream alongside others” with Playing with Friends
- Start letting viewers in little by little, beginning with Designated-Members participation
- Once you’re comfortable and your setup is in place, expand to Balanced and Free Participation
Rather than throwing the doors wide open all at once, if you start within a range you can manage, you can enjoy streaming without being pushed around by trolls.
Related: Beginner Guide List / How to Play on the Official Servers / Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)