Current streamers

This page aims to write and inform the reader about modern day streamers and how there career started from nothing to being apart of the biggest streamers of the 20th sentry.

The Burnt Peanut

TheBurntPeanut first started streaming in 2019, mainly playing Escape from Tarkov and making guides and gameplay content. At the time, his streams were much more serious and struggled to stand out in a crowded FPS community filled with established creators. After taking a long break from streaming, he came back with a completely different approach. Instead of using a normal face-cam, he created the now-famous peanut avatar using a cheap 3D model, Blender, and motion-tracking software. The character gave him the freedom to become louder, more chaotic, and far more comedic on stream, which quickly helped him develop a unique identity online.

https://www.youtube.com/@TheBurntPeanut

Ohnepixel

OhnePixel first began creating content around 2019, focusing mainly on Counter-Strike skins, trading, and case-opening videos on YouTube. What made him stand out early was his deep knowledge of the skin market combined with his loud reactions and entertaining personality. As he moved onto Twitch in 2020, his streams became much bigger, especially within the CS:GO community, where viewers tuned in for high-stakes case openings, skin reviews, and tournament watch parties.

https://www.youtube.com/@ohnepixel

Pokimane

Pokimane first started streaming in 2013 while studying chemical engineering in college. She mainly streamed League of Legends gameplay on Twitch and slowly built an audience through her consistent uploads, friendly personality, and strong interaction with viewers. As her popularity grew, she decided to focus fully on content creation, expanding onto YouTube with highlights, vlogs, and reaction content that helped her reach a much larger audience beyond Twitch.

https://www.youtube.com/@pokimane

Michael Reeves

Michael Reeves first became popular through YouTube around 2017 by creating comedy-based engineering and programming videos. His early content featured chaotic inventions like a robot that shocked him whenever he died in a game or devices built to solve ridiculous everyday problems. His mix of coding knowledge, dark humor, and unpredictable editing style quickly made him stand out from other tech creators online.

https://www.youtube.com/@MichaelReeves

When looking at streamers like Pokimane, Michael Reeves, TheBurntPeanut, and OhnePixel, one thing becomes clear when trying to grown your live stream, is not just skill, but personality. Each of these creators built their audience by bringing something unique to their streams, whether it was humor, creativity, energy, or strong interaction with their community. Viewers are more likely to return when they feel entertained and connected to the streamer rather than simply watching gameplay. Their success also shows that authenticity matters, as audiences tend to enjoy creators who feel natural and genuine on stream.

Another important lesson from their growth is the value of consistency and creating content beyond livestreams. Many of these streamers expanded their audience through YouTube videos, Shorts, TikTok’s and collaborations with other large content creators, helping their funniest or most memorable moments reach new viewers online. Building a successful stream today often means treating livestreams as part of a larger brand rather than the only form of content. By combining a strong personality, regular interaction with viewers, and shareable content across multiple platforms, streamers can increase their audience and create a loyal community over time.

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