“When I got it, I had to message so many people asking if it was a phishing scam. “This was an official email I got from Twitch,” he said during the stream. It’s become clear Sykkuno was not impressed with how Twitch was handling its relationship with him.ĭuring his inaugural stream at YouTube, he took a moment to mention that an email from the company misspelled his name as “Sukkuno.” “But for a company that’s worth billions of dollars, is that smart? Is that a good move?” “By not paying out their creators, you know, I guess they will save like a few million in the process,” he said. (Especially considering creators’ rancor over reports that Twitch is developing plans to milk more money from Partner streamers.) KristoferYee went on to say Sykkuno’s move might be a sign of things to come for Twitch. ![]() However, it’s worth mentioning that Twitch streamer KristoferYee went live May 2 saying he knew the deal YouTube offered was so good it simply made “absolutely no sense for to stay on Twitch.” YouTube Gaming does not publicly release details of its deals, so we have no confirmed information about what Sykkuno was offered to move, or if Twitch may have counteroffered. Over on YouTube, he’s got 2.72 million subscribers. Sykkuno had 4 million followers on Twitch, and regularly saw audiences of 20,000 or more concurrent viewers. “Sykkuno has earned the respect and admiration of his viewers, and we can’t wait to see how he grows his channel and business in the years to come.” ![]() “When Sykkuno first started his content career on YouTube nearly a decade ago, I was one of many who spent hours watching his League of Legends videos,” Chen says.
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