Screen recording built for bug reports, not meetings

Generic screen recording tools like Loom and OBS capture video — but when you're reporting a bug, video alone isn't enough. VibeCheck records your screen while simultaneously capturing console logs, network requests, and user interactions in the browser. The result is a bug report that shows developers not just what happened, but exactly why it happened.

Video alone doesn't explain the bug

A screen recording shows a button that doesn't work. But was it a JavaScript error? A failed API call? A timeout? A CORS issue? Developers need the technical context to diagnose the problem. VibeCheck captures console logs, network request and response data, and user actions alongside the video — all synchronized on the same timeline. One recording tells the complete story.

Console logs and network requests, captured automatically

You don't need to open DevTools or manually copy error messages. VibeCheck's Chrome extension intercepts console output and network traffic in the background while you record. Every console.log, console.error, warning, failed fetch call, and slow API response is captured with timestamps and full payloads. When the developer opens your report, the logs are right there next to the video.

Session replay that goes beyond video

VibeCheck doesn't just record pixels — it records the DOM. Session replay lets developers scrub through the exact page state at any point in the recording. Combined with the user action timeline (showing clicks, inputs, scrolling, and navigation), developers can reproduce the bug step-by-step in their own environment without watching the entire video.

Share bug recordings instantly

Every VibeCheck recording generates a shareable link. No file uploads, no compression artifacts, no 'the video is too large for Jira.' Recipients see the recording, console logs, network requests, and user actions in a clean web interface — no account or installation needed to view. The link works in Slack, email, Jira, GitHub Issues, or anywhere you paste it.

Screen recording with simultaneous console log capture
Network request and response data with headers and payloads
User action timeline showing clicks, inputs, and page navigation
DOM-based session replay for precise bug reproduction
Annotated screenshots with drawing and highlight tools
Shareable links — no account needed to view reports
Lightweight Chrome extension — no performance impact while recording
Works on any website regardless of tech stack

Frequently asked questions

Record bugs the way developers need to see them

Video, console logs, network requests, and user actions — all in one recording.