Why add your camera at all?
A face in the corner changes how a recording lands. Demos feel like a conversation instead of surveillance footage, feedback reads as friendly instead of blunt, and viewers stay noticeably longer. For anything sensitive — code review, design critique, onboarding — the camera bubble is the difference between “a video” and “a teammate explaining something.”
Step-by-step
- Open the recorder. Click the ClipCast icon in Chrome (or press Alt+Shift+R) on the page you want to record.
- Turn on Camera and Microphone. In the setup overlay, toggle Camera (the bubble overlay) and Microphone, and pick the right devices. A live preview shows exactly what viewers will see.
- Pick a background. Optional: choose Blur or a Virtual background for the camera bubble — useful when recording from a busy room.
- Record with the bubble. Start recording. Your face appears in a circular bubble over the page — drag it anywhere, and it follows you as you switch tabs.
- Stop and share. Stop on the floating pill; the clip uploads and the share link is copied. Viewers see your screen and your camera together.
Permissions, explained once
The first time you enable the camera or mic, Chrome shows its native permission prompt — that grant belongs to the site you’re recording on, which is why ClipCast asks in a clear overlay on the page rather than from a hidden popup. If you clicked “Block” in the past: click the camera icon in Chrome’s address bar → Always allow, then reload the page.
The gotchas (and fixes)
- Bubble missing on a specific site? A few sites send a restrictive permissions policy that blocks cameras for everything on the page, extensions included. Your recording continues without the bubble there — switch to another tab and it reappears.
- Mic recorded silence? Check the input device in the setup overlay — Bluetooth headsets love to register twice. The overlay’s live level meter should move when you speak.
- Echo in the recording? You’re capturing tab audio while the tab plays your own mic back (video calls do this). Record mic-only, or mute the tab.
- Camera looks dark? Face a window or lamp — webcams fix exposure on the brightest area. The blur background also hides a messy room better than you’d expect.
Camera-only vs screen + camera
Screen + bubble is right for demos and walkthroughs. If the message is the face — a welcome video, a quick intro — record a tab with the camera bubble large and the page minimal. Either way you get the same share link, viewer analytics, and (on Pro) an AI transcript with chapters.
Related
New to screen recording in the browser? Start with How to record your screen in Chrome. Weighing tools? ClipCast vs Loom is the honest version. Keyboard-first? Every shortcut.