The first question many people ask when looking to top up Yangqi Voice Coins isn't "where to recharge," but rather "How many Coins do I actually get for 1 RMB? Which tier offers the best value?" For overseas users, stacking exchange rates and fees means choosing the wrong channel could cost you the price of a meal per transaction. This article compares official prices, App Store/Google Play prices, and agent platform prices available in 2026, helping you instantly see which tiers are worth buying now and which can wait.
 

First, Understand the Official Pricing Standard

Yangqi Voice's primary pricing anchor is the New Taiwan Dollar (NT), with a publicly stated ratio of approximately NT$1 ≈ 100 Coins. When converted to RMB and USD, and combined with varying exchange rates and discounts across different channels, you end up with "three prices for the same tier."
 

Main Tier Price Comparison Table (2026 Reference)

Tier Label Coins Amount Official In-App (NT$) RMB Equivalent Overseas Store (± Fees)
Small Tier 1,000 NT$10 ≈¥2.3 +5%~8%
Starter 5,000 NT$50 ≈¥11.5 +5%~8%
Regular 10,000 NT$100 ≈¥23 +5%~8%
Mid-Tier 50,000 NT$500 ≈¥115 +5%~8%
Large Tier 100,000 NT$1,000 ≈¥230 +5%~8%

Note: RMB conversion is estimated at NT$1 ≈ ¥0.23; actual rates depend on the payment gateway at checkout. Apple/Google channels add an extra platform fee, making "Overseas Store Direct Top-up" typically the most expensive of the three paths.

Yangqi Voice Coin Price List and Top-up Ratio Overview

What Can Coins Be Used For in Yangqi Voice?

Knowing the price is useless without knowing what you get in return for spending Coins. Here’s how to judge the tiers:

  • Gift Tipping: Regular gifts cost hundreds to thousands of Coins; luxury gifts start at tens of thousands. This is the main income source for streamers.
  • Opening Voice Rooms: Premium rooms charge daily, roughly 150 Coins/day (referencing similar products).
  • Noble/VIP Badges: Entrance effects, colored nicknames, and ranking boosts are paid monthly or via one-time consumption.
  • Mini-games/Interaction: Built-in voice room games like Ludo or Uno also burn through Coins.

If you are a light user (occasionally listening in and sending small gifts), 5,000–10,000 Coins (¥11.5–¥23) is enough for one or two weeks. Playmates/Heavy Spenders should start directly with the 50,000 Coin tier for a lower cost per Coin.
 

Real Price Differences Between Three Top-up Channels

① In-App Direct Top-up (WeChat/Alipay/NT Card)

Most stable for domestic users—original price, no discount, instant credit. Ideal for small tests and those who hate hassle. The downside is that overseas cards often fail.

② Apple App Store / Google Play

The most common "default option" for overseas users, but exchange rates + platform cuts are applied twice. The same tier is generally 5%–8% more expensive than in-app, adding up significantly over a year.

③ Top-up Platforms (Taking 94LIVES as an Example)

This is an increasingly popular path among overseas Chinese. 94LIVES handles Yangqi Voice cross-border top-ups, supporting PayPal / Visa / MasterCard / UnionPay. Their settlement price is usually 5%–10% lower than in-app. For example, 100,000 Coins cost about ¥230 officially, but 94LIVES consistently floats in the ¥210–218 range. Coins are credited within 1–10 minutes after entering your ID, with Chinese customer support monitoring orders.

Unlike unofficial agents on e-commerce platforms, 94LIVES offers fixed rates and transparent after-sales, avoiding the "black card risk" associated with some stores offering discounts below 5%. For overseas users without mainland payment tools, this is the lowest comprehensive cost route.


How to Choose the Most Cost-Effective Tier

Three specific suggestions:

  1. First-time Top-up: Choose 5,000 or 10,000 Coins to test the waters. Regardless of the channel, confirm the account details are correct and the crediting speed is acceptable.
  2. Long-term Tipping/Playmates: The 50,000 Coin tier is the "value inflection point," with a per-Coin cost nearly 10% lower than smaller tiers.
  3. Overseas Users: Prioritize multi-currency channels like 94LIVES, avoiding the stacked fees of Apple/Google direct top-ups. The yearly savings could cover two more small-tier top-ups.