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  2. Kyedae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyedae

    Kyedae began streaming on Twitch on October 31, 2020. [4] In less than a year, Kyedae gained a significant following, amassing 172,000 subscribers on YouTube and acquiring 288,000 followers on Twitch. [5] Kyedae's big break came when she was featured on the front page of Twitch, significantly boosting her follower count.

  3. List of most-subscribed Twitch channels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most-subscribed...

    Kai Cenat is currently the most-subscribed channel on Twitch of all time. [1] A subscription on Twitch is a way for users to support their favourite streamers and creators on the platform using real money. [2] Content creators can offer custom emotes, badges, and more to subscribers.

  4. PogChamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PogChamp

    There were two poll options: the face of American Twitch livestreamer UmiNoKaiju, and the existing KomodoHype emote. KomodoHype won with 81% of the votes, [38] and PogChamp was permanently replaced with it. The original KomodoHype emote was kept, which left two different emotes with different names and duplicate images. [34]

  5. Fanum (streamer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanum_(streamer)

    Fanum began streaming on Twitch in November 2016 and made his YouTube channel, JustFanum, in May 2017. He posted his first video in February 2019. He streamed NBA 2K and later expanded to IRL vlogs, which often drew upon his experiences in New York.

  6. Video game livestreaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_game_livestreaming

    Free-to-play games cost no money to buy and play but offer purchasable items in-game in order to turn a profit. Items can range from clothes, weapon accessories, emotes, and more. Due to its popularity among live streamers and easy accessibility for viewers to play, free-to-play games blew up in popularity in the video game community.

  7. Justin.tv - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin.tv

    Justin Kan speaking at Gnomedex in 2007. The original Justin.tv was a single channel featuring Justin Kan. Wearing a webcam attached to a baseball cap and streamed online via a laptop-backpack system designed by co-founder Kyle Vogt, [10] Kan decided he would wear the camera 24/7, and he began streaming continuous live video and audio at midnight March 19, 2007. [11]

  8. CodeMiko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CodeMiko

    The CodeMiko avatar's in-universe backstory is that she is a video game character without a game. She had always wanted to be in a mainstream video game but never succeeded in doing so due to her 'Glitch' (a story arc very similar to Vanellope von Schweetz from the Wreck-It Ralph franchise).

  9. Facial motion capture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facial_motion_capture

    Facial motion capture is the process of electronically converting the movements of a person's face into a digital database using cameras or laser scanners.This database may then be used to produce computer graphics (CG), computer animation for movies, games, or real-time avatars.