If you are still using virtual cables or NDI screen capture, here is why you should switch immediately.
A pastor on stage (captured by vMix) interacts with a small group of home-bound members via Zoom. The plugin places those members into virtual pews using vMix’s 3D Zoom transitions. The return feed shows the home user the live service with lyrics and sermon slides.
The plugin gives each Zoom participant their own dedicated audio bus. This means you can send "Mix Minus" audio automatically. Each guest hears everyone except their own voice echo. This eliminates the screeching feedback loop that plagues screen-capture methods.
A tournament caster in vMix brings in four remote players via Zoom. Each player’s feed is cropped, overlayed on their game screen, and recorded as an ISO. The return feed shows the player the live broadcast with a 10-second delay (to prevent ghosting/cheating). vmix zoom plugin
Instead of sharing a screen or using a single NDI source, this plugin treats each Zoom participant as an independent vMix input.
1. Individual Participant Feeds (ISO Recording)
2. Audio Return & Mix Minus
3. Active Speaker & Gallery Triggers
4. Remote PTZ & Camera Control
5. Direct Screen Share Capture
6. vMix Call Integration (Hybrid)
In the modern era of live streaming, the line between traditional broadcasting and remote conferencing has completely blurred. Software like vMix has become the industry standard for multi-camera production, graphics, and streaming. Meanwhile, Zoom has emerged as the ubiquitous tool for meetings, webinars, and remote guest interviews.
For years, connecting these two platforms was a headache. Producers relied on virtual audio cables, NDI Scan Converters, and screen capture workarounds that resulted in audio drift, poor reliability, and low production value. If you are still using virtual cables or
Enter the vMix Zoom Plugin.
If you produce church services, corporate town halls, podcasts, or live talk shows, this native integration is a game-changer. This article will explain exactly what the plugin does, how to install it, advanced configuration tips, and how to troubleshoot common issues.