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In the wake of iShowSpeed’s viewbot drama, what happens to the Twitch record books?

Earlier this week, the streamer Jynxzi hosted a League of Legends event that got more viewership than most broadcasts from the game’s professional circuit. Or did it?

Jynxzi, whose real name is Nicholas Stewart, gathered 40 of the most popular LoL streamers for a marathon tournament that unfolded across an eight-hour stream. Data from Esports Charts shows that the stream peaked at 920,000 concurrent viewers. That was a higher sum than the combined peak viewership of three major LoL events that took place earlier this year.

Once upon a time, a broadcast of that caliber would have drawn widespread accolades and underscored the power of creator-led media. In 2026, however, the streaming community is mired in a prolonged viewbotting controversy, and that makes it hard to take big viewership numbers at face value.

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The debate over the use of viewbots has been simmering for a while, but it boiled over during iShowSpeed‘s trip to the Caribbean. While broadcasting live from the Dominican Republic, Speed reached what seemed to be a record-setting traffic figure: Two million concurrent viewers.

That number turned out to be fool’s gold. Speed himself admitted that his DR viewership had been juiced by viewbotting. His fellow creator xQc theorized that it wasn’t Speed himself doing the botting, but rather fans adding artificial viewership on the streamer’s behalf.

In response to the drama, Twitch sprang into action. CEO Dan Clancy announced a new policy that caps the concurrent viewership of streamers who are accused of viewbotting.

As that policy takes hold, those of us who report on Twitch’s top draws are left with some tricky questions. How do you evaluate a stream that does massive numbers when the veracity of those numbers is constantly in doubt, even when stream hosts aren’t using bots themselves?

That brings us back to Jynxzi. The viewership volume for his LoL event is impressive, but it makes more sense to focus on the cultural impact of his escapades in the gaming world. His recent chess streams, for example, caused the game’s traffic to spike, according to Twitch Tracker data. Some of those views may have been illegitimate, but the overall trend isn’t.

Major players in the creator economy have been beating this drum for years: Viewership numbers may jump off the screen, but fan engagement is the truest indicator of an influential personality. Perhaps Twitch’s viewbot crackdown will switch up the narrative, but the platform has a long way to go.

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Published by
Sam Gutelle

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