Disguised Toast Offers Take On Streaming On Twitch

Ennan Zapanta July 2, 2022
Disguised Toast Offers Take On Streaming On Twitch

Over the past two years, Twitch streaming has become extremely popular, especially during the global pandemic.

Now, this streaming service is in a battle with a huge platform like YouTube. Gigguk, Disguised Toast, and Scarra recently had a fascinating discussion regarding the content on both sites. 

For more than ten years, YouTube has been around. It was planted in 2005, but it didn’t begin to blossom until 2010. This website is well known for allowing content creators to upload different kinds of videos. However, Twitch, a social media site known for livestreams, is a rival to YouTube. Famously known as Gigguk, Garnt Maneetapho is a British YouTuber. He is well-known for posting Japanese anime-related videos on YouTube. The YouTuber recently appeared on a program run by Twitch powerhouses William “Scarra” Li and Jeremy “Disguised Toast” Wang.

The British YouTuber’s efforts to produce engaging YouTube videos were praised by the Twitch streams. He respects YouTube creators more than Twitch streamers, as Disguised Toast asserts. It is more difficult to be a good YouTuber than a good streamer, according to Toast. Even the co-founder of Offline TV, Scarra, concurred with partner Toast that maintaining Twitch broadcasting is simpler than producing content for YouTube.

Scarra shared, “Streaming is easy. I can breathe in the stream.”

Gigguk further highlighted that the standard for content is quite high, thanks to top YouTube creators like MrBeast and PewDiePie, which may be the cause of YouTube’s complexity. The Englishman mentioned how Twitch has begun to raise its standards as well. Gigguk and the Twitch streamer came to the conclusion that YouTube content is more challenging than Twitch. However, this does not imply that setting up on Twitch is simple.

Gigguk queried Toast and Scarra about the possibility of becoming well-known on Twitch for having a strong personality and communication abilities.

The Twitch pros disagreed, arguing that having a positive disposition and strong technical abilities are not the only requirements. Scarra also mentioned that even when not streaming, Twitch requires a lot of grinding. With “chill vibes,” according to Toast, a new streamer is up against 10,000 other competitors.

The Twitch experts explained that in order to get views, one must be really good at what they do because viewers only want to see the best.