Twitch streamer Asmongold thinks Ninja's recent move to start streaming on every platform isn't going to be good for one of the world's most popular streamers. Asmongold, who's known for his World of Warcraft streams, argues that this might be bad for Ninja in various ways, including reduced viewer interaction and management issues. While he doesn't think it's a smart choice for the quality of the content, he recognizes that Ninja is so popular he doesn't need to stick with just Twitch.

Gaming personality Ninja, who has more than 18 million Twitch followers, took an unexpected hiatus from streaming, stating that he didn't know when he'd be back and, more importantly, where. Some high-profile Twitch streamers have taken similar breaks, and others are leaving the platform altogether, which sparked questions about Ninja's future. As the streaming star took the break, he also gave away his Twitch partner privileges. Those aren't coming back either, since even the updated Twitch partnership program requires no simultaneous streams on other platforms.

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Tyler "Ninja" Blevins released a short video in which he says he is back to streaming. In the video, alongside clips of his streaming highlights, Ninja talks about streaming "everywhere". His list includes platforms like Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, and Twitch. According to the popular Twitch streamer Asmongold, this will thin out the viewership too much, and to him, it would be smarter to focus the effort on one platform. He argues that viewership will split, and it will be too hard for him to talk to the viewers, manage the stream, and ultimately deliver a quality product.

In Asmongold's view, Ninja could just switch to YouTube, since he's become more popular on Google's video platform. Nevertheless, Asmongold is interested in the experiment and whether it will be successful, hinting at being open to streaming somewhere else himself. In his view, this is a trial for all streamers, and only Ninja has the guts to try it out for the others. YouTube Gaming has been recruiting popular streamers recently with exclusive deals, which would make it a natural transition. However, Ninja doesn't seem interested in being tied down, even with nearly 24 million YouTube subscribers, which is larger than even his Twitch following.

While Asmongold starts jokingly referring to Ninja's rough Mixer deal and Ninja's rough Mixer deal and by criticizing Ninja's new plans, he quickly pivots to praising the video game personality as the greatest gamer of them all - the one who "beat the game." According to Asmongold, Ninja has had such massive success, that he could easily just kick back, relax, do what he wants, and enjoy the fruits of his labor. And perhaps what Ninja wants now is to forget partnerships and just deliver content for as many people as he can.

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