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Pages in category "Gaming YouTubers" The following 97 pages are in this category, out of 97 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Angryginge; D.
Pages in category "Gaming-related YouTube channels" The following 55 pages are in this category, out of 55 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
A livestream by Dream on YouTube in November 2020 with about 700,000 peak viewers was the 6th highest viewed gaming stream of all time as of January 2021. [12] A December 2020 Polygon article stated that "2020 has been a tremendous year for Dream", describing him as "YouTube's biggest gaming channel of the moment." [13]
Smosh Games is a YouTube channel owned by Smosh, initially launched in 2012.An amalgamation between Smosh and ClevverGames by then joint owner Alloy Digital, the original members consisted of Smosh cast members Anthony Padilla, Ian Hecox, and Mari Takahashi along with ClevverGames members David "Lasercorn" Moss, Joshua "Jovenshire" Ovenshire, and Matt Sohinki.
Rosales-Birou's channel grew in popularity as his gameplay videos were often recommended on YouTube's suggestions, and he has since become a Let's Play creator on YouTube as a full-time job; [3] in 2014 The Atlantic cited Rosales-Birou as an example of a Let's Player making a living off of gaming videos. [18] On his primary YouTube channel ...
Evan Fong (born May 31, 1992), known online as VanossGaming (or simply Vanoss), is a Canadian YouTuber, musician, comedian, and DJ.As one of the most popular gaming personalities on YouTube, his videography consists of montage-style videos of him and other creators playing various video games, such as Grand Theft Auto V, Garry's Mod, and various titles from the Call of Duty franchise.
He has a music career and occasionally makes music videos. He also collaborated with Cyprien Iov on Bigorneaux & Coquillages, which stopped activity in 2019, the channel has over 6 million subscribers as of January 2024. [3] In September 2018, he launched a gaming channel titled Squeezie Gaming on which are exposed edited videos of his lives on ...
In April 2019, his channel reached 10 million subscribers, becoming the second Australian gaming content creator to hit that milestone. [5] By July 2019, Eacott was the third-most-subscribed YouTube Fortnite streamer, with more than 10.8 million subscribers and over 7 billion video views. [20]