Hosted rooms are where Voksly moves beyond a one-on-one translated call. The host opens the room, shares the invite, and controls who enters. Guests can join through the link, choose the language they want to receive, and enter the room without needing the same setup as a full account holder.
From there, the host decides how the room runs. Two total participants still behave like a normal call. Once the room grows beyond that, meeting credits apply on eligible plans. That makes it possible to keep the room simple for smaller conversations and only use extra room capacity when it is actually needed.
Start small, add people when needed, and only use extra room capacity when the call actually becomes a meeting.
The language flow is also different from a normal meeting tool. Each participant can choose the language they want to receive. That matters in multilingual rooms because not everyone needs the same output language, and not every conversation has one clean meeting language that works for everyone.
For workspace plans, the room can also become more than a live event. Recordings, transcript PDFs, and AI meeting notes give the host a way to keep the conversation useful after it ends.
If your team regularly runs multilingual meetings, partner calls, or onboarding sessions, the fastest way to evaluate Voksly is to use it on the next room where multiple people need to stay aligned in real time.