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Valkyrae Explains Why Streamers Are Quitting YouTube Livestreaming

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Valkyrae Explains Why Streamers Are Quitting YouTube Livestreaming

YouTube offered Valkyrae a multi-year exclusivity contract in January 2020. This contract was part of YouTube’s efforts to bolster its ‘YouTube Gaming’ streaming platform. Hofstetter accepted the offer and renewed the contract multiple times throughout the years. She streamed exclusively on YouTube until 2025.Rachell ‘Valkyrae’ Hofstetter is an American streamer, entrepreneur and content creator. She […]

YouTube offered Valkyrae a multi-year exclusivity contract in January 2020. This contract was part of YouTube’s efforts to bolster its ‘YouTube Gaming’ streaming platform. Hofstetter accepted the offer and renewed the contract multiple times throughout the years. She streamed exclusively on YouTube until 2025.Rachell ‘Valkyrae’ Hofstetter is an American streamer, entrepreneur and content creator. She began streaming on Twitch in 2015 and rose to fame during Fortnite’s surge in 2018 as one of the game’s most prominent content creators. Valkyrae continues to stream primarily gaming, chatting and vlog content. She is a co-owner of esports group100 Thieves and was its first female content creator. Hofstetter also owns a media company, Hihi Studios, which publishes manga and comics. She has scored acting roles in series such as Sonic Prime and music videos including The Kid Laroi’s ‘Girls’ and Bella Poarch’s ‘Build A B—–.’ In 2024, Valkyrae landed a starring voice acting role in Lionsgate Studios’ movie ‘Goldbeak.’2024 was a massive year for streamers, with household names like Kai Cenat and Caseoh becoming hugely successful. As streamers gain lasting repute and influence, they make new decisions on how to pivot their career paths — a growing group of creators including Ludwig, Timthetatman and Swagg are abandoning YouTube as the site shifts its priorities away from its streaming base. Ludwig Ahgren, who has 6.4 million subscribers on his YouTube channel @ludwig, notably ended his exclusivity contract in late 2024 to return to Twitch in a week-long League of Legends stream. He appeared on Valkyrae’s X.com post to satirically encourage her to consider multistreaming.

In summary, Hofstetter states:lmao why dont you just multistream???Hofstetter states YouTube has “pros and cons” — consistently uploading on the platform results in an uptick in stream viewers. However, she claims many YouTube viewers also hesitate to watch Twitch streams due to the platform’s visible ad presence: “There are ads on YouTube as well, but not nearly as much as on Twitch […] because Twitch needs those ads to survive.” Lisa agrees that the decision is complicated, saying “There’s so many pros and cons because YouTube is just bigger as an application but then Twitch serves you as a streamer way more and you get more benefit from it.”

Related Article: Valkyrae Returns to Twitch With Big Announcement

Her YouTube channel, @Valkyrae, has over four million subscribers but only posts about one to four videos monthly. When Lisa asks if she’d like to upload more videos in 2025, she says “I don’t think it works with the type of content that I would want to upload.” Well-known gamers Timothy ‘Timthetatman’ Betar and Kris ‘Swagg’ Lamberson both returned to Twitch earlier in the year, with Betar opting to multistream and Swagg completely halting streams on his 3-million-subscriber channel @Swagg. Swagg even posted a video, “Why I’m Leaving YouTube,” sharing Valkyrae’s sentiments that while YouTube treated him well the platform was not “adaptable for streaming.”Followers and collaborators alike were excited at the announcement. Fellow streamers Ludwig, Pokimane, Fuslie, Hasan Piker and Jasontheween all commented to show their support, and fans rushed to send ‘welcome back’ messages.

‘Multistreaming’ is a growing phenomenon in which creators stream on several platforms including YouTube and Twitch at once. Valkyrae discussed multistreaming in her Press Esc podcast, noting that fellow influencer @fuslie already does. However, YouTube’s strict copyright enforcement deters her: “The DMCA is so strong on YouTube, I fear I’m going to be playing music on Twitch that is going to get me banned on YouTube.”

Rachell ‘Valkyrae’ Hofstetter will join them in 2025 by returning to Twitch after a five-year YouTube exclusivity contract, and she has revealed her reasoning in a new episode of her Press Esc podcast. Here’s everything we know about Valkyrae, why she’s leaving YouTube and the greater trend of streamers returning to Twitch.

I’ll be doing my first stream on Twitch on my birthday, January 8th! Celebrating 10 years of streaming as well as a special marathon announcement.– Rachell ‘Valkyrae’ Hofstetter

Pictured: Valkyrae's channel, showing a dedicated 'Shorts' tab.
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