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Tfue laughing at the camera
Image via Tfue's Twitch

Tfue blasts Twitch ads, says they’re why he moved to Kick

"Ads are killing everything."

Tfue started streaming again on Nov. 19 by joining Kick. In a livestream from Nov. 22, he explained ads played a major part in his decision to move away from Twitch and join Kick instead.

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“One of the main reasons I like the platform [Kick] is there’s no ads,” he said on a Fortnite livestream (at around 45 minutes). He said that Twitch featured too many ads, which eventually eroded his motivation to stream and hampered the quality of his stream in general.

Fortnite's main screen shown with Tfue's camera on the corner.
Tfue has returned to streaming after a five-month break. Screenshot via Tfue’s Kick

“I hate ads, omg they are the worst… I think I ran over five minutes every hour,” he said in the livestream. “I’m glad we don’t have to deal with that sh*t here, you know. It’s so bad. Ads are killing everything.”

The latest ad policies on Twitch have been controversial since they were implemented earlier this year. Free users are now getting more ads, and both viewers and streamers have expressed frustration over this.

Tfue said he was already approached by its competitor, Kick, several months ago, and refused their offers several times. Then, he stopped streaming for five months and ended up accepting Kick’s offer. “Ever since I stopped streaming, Kick just wanted to sign me and I was saying no for months,” he said in Nov. 22’s livestream. “But I got bored and I wanted to stream again, so it made sense.”

Now, Tfue mostly creates content on Kick, but he has started doing some livestreams on Twitch again, too. He received a warm welcome by his community when returning to streaming. He has an average viewership of almost 30,000, with a peak of over 53,000 even though he only has 13 hours of airtime, according to Streams Charts.


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Author
Image of Eva Martinello
Eva Martinello
Eva is a Staff Writer from Paris. Her part-time job is charging into walls with Reinhardt. She has been covering League of Legends esports and other titles for six years. She still believes in a Moscow Five comeback. She also fell into the MMO pit and covers FFXIV and Genshin.