Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Luzento is a live-stream distribution platform built specifically for churches. Its core idea is to let a church send a single live stream to Luzento, which then distributes it to Facebook Live, YouTube Live, Twitter Live, websites, mobile apps, and TV platforms such as Roku, Apple TV, and Amazon Fire TV. Strictly speaking, it is not a traditional email, SMS, voice, or IM communications service; it is more of a video-based outreach and social engagement tool.
The platform supports connecting social accounts such as Facebook Pages, Twitter Accounts, and YouTube Channels, and it works with common live-stream encoders via a Stream URL and Stream Key. The source material also mentions tutorials for OBS Studio, vMix, custom RTMP Profile, Persistent Stream Key, and related setups, suggesting a workflow designed to lower the barrier to live streaming. For engagement, comments, likes, and reactions from Facebook or YouTube can be aggregated into a single interface, making it easier for hosts or communications teams to manage everything in one place. Media Studio can quickly clip footage from a live stream, add branding, and publish it to YouTube or Facebook; Stream Insights shows which platforms viewers watched on, watch time, and real-time interactions.
Luzento is sold as a monthly subscription. The Small plan costs $40/month, Medium costs $65/month, Large costs $100/month, and XL costs $180/month, with a 14-day free trial available. Plan differences mainly come down to the number of channels, monthly viewing hours, social connections, and archive retention. For example, Small includes 100 hours/month of viewing time, while XL includes 750 hours/month. Unfortunately, the source material does not disclose key performance metrics such as live-stream latency, availability SLA, delivery rate, or concurrent capacity.
Its strengths are its church-focused positioning, clear setup path, ability to cover multiple digital destinations with a single stream, and the potential to significantly reduce post-service editing and archiving time. The drawbacks are its limited communications capabilities: there is no information about email, SMS, or voice channels. Compliance and support details are also limited, and the terms state that materials are provided “as is” without any commitment that they are accurate, complete, or current. Luzento is best suited to small and mid-sized churches, online worship teams, and religious organizations that want to manage multi-platform live streaming in one place.
Use from mainland China requires careful evaluation. The major platforms Luzento depends on, including YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter, are restricted in mainland China, and the availability of its official website and payments is not disclosed. As a result, access from China should be considered partially restricted. If you are serving congregations in mainland China, local alternatives such as Tencent Cloud Live, Alibaba Cloud ApsaraVideo Live, Mudu, and Vhall may be worth considering. For overseas church audiences, Restream, StreamYard, Vimeo Livestream, Dacast, and BoxCast are also useful comparison options.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on luzento.com official site.
luzento.com is an United States Video Infra provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach luzento.com directly.