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Iriun Webcam review

A straight, balanced look at what Iriun does well and where it falls short — so you can decide if it fits your setup.

Editorial note: This is an editorial review. Specific claims about resolution limits and any paid tier should be confirmed against the current release before publishing.

The short version

Iriun does one thing and does it simply: it turns your phone into a webcam for your computer, free, with no account required. For most people replacing a poor laptop camera, that's exactly enough.

Setup

Installation is quick — a desktop client, a phone app, same Wi-Fi network, done. The friction points are the usual ones for this category: camera permissions on macOS, and remembering to launch the client before your video app. Neither is a dealbreaker.

Video quality

Because it uses your phone's sensor, the image is typically sharper than a built-in webcam, up to 1080p. Quality over Wi-Fi depends on signal strength; USB is steadier. [PLACEHOLDER: confirm maximum resolution and any 4K support.]

Reliability

On a solid network or USB, it's stable. On weak Wi-Fi you'll see the occasional stutter — expected for any wireless camera stream, and easily fixed by going wired.

Pros & cons

ProsCons
Free, no accountWi-Fi quality affects latency
Sharper than most laptop camsTies up your phone during calls
Works in any camera appNeeds a mount or stand
Win / Mac / Linux / iOS / Android[PLACEHOLDER: free-tier limits, if any]

Verdict

If your built-in webcam disappoints and you own a reasonably modern phone, Iriun is an easy recommendation — it's free, quick to set up, and works across platforms. Heavy streamers may want to compare it against alternatives for specific features, but as a no-cost upgrade it's hard to fault.

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