The rise of Jynxzi

The rise of Jynxzi

Hello guys, welcome to Netphantomclan Today we are diving into one of the most unbelievable success stories in streaming history. Five viewers, a so called dead game, nonstop accusations of viewbotting and somehow ending up as the number one streamer on Twitch. Jynxzi didn’t just grow he exploded. From chaotic rage moments to pulling tens of thousands of live viewers, his rise looked sudden, impossible, and almost unreal. So how did he actually do it and was it truly overnight, or years in the making?

 Nicholas Stewart
Nicholas Stewart

Before the fame, Jynxzi real name Nicholas Stewart started streaming back in early 2019 under the name I Sweat Games. He played Rainbow Six Siege, a game already losing popularity, and averaged fewer than five viewers per stream. He tried switching to bigger titles like Fortnite and Apex Legends, hoping for growth, but nothing worked. Most people would’ve quit. Jynxzi didn’t.Instead of chasing trends, Jynxzi leaned into what made him different. Siege was slow, tactical, and intense but his reactions were anything but. Every clutch, every death, every mistake triggered raw, unfiltered rage. It wasn’t an act. It was genuine emotion, and viewers couldn’t look away. Even when matches ended badly, people stayed because Jynxzi was entertaining no matter what happened.

Jynxzi committed to streaming every single day
Jynxzi committed to streaming every single day

 

In 2020, everything changed. Jynxzi committed to streaming every single day at a fixed time, sometimes for up to nine hours straight. No long breaks. No excuses. At first, growth was slow but month by month it stacked up. His followers jumped from 300 to over 12,000, and his average viewership climbed into the hundreds. He wasn’t just streaming more he was training viewers to show up consistently.Then came YouTube and TikTok. Rage compilations, tutorials, and 1v1s introduced Jynxzi to massive new audiences. One detail made him stand out even more: he played exclusively on console with a controller. In a space dominated by mouse-and-keyboard players, he became the face of console Siege serving a massive audience no one else was targeting. By 2023, he had hundreds of thousands of YouTube subscribers and millions of TikTok followers.

Accusation of Toxicity
Accusation of Toxicity

With fame came backlash. Accusations of toxicity, claims that he was copying IShowSpeed, and even hints from creators like Trainwrecks suggesting top streamers were viewbotting. None of it was proven. Instead of arguing, Jynxzi challenged the best Siege player in the world to a live 1v1. Over 40,000 people watched as the underdog fought back round after round. He lost but earned massive respect.By early 2023, Jynxzi surpassed one million followers and became the most-subscribed streamer on Twitch. To outsiders, it looked like luck. In reality, it was five years of grinding when no one cared, driven by genuine passion instead of money or fame. Viewers can always tell when a creator truly loves what they do and that’s what turned a five-viewer streamer into a legend.

Watch thefull video below

Leave a Reply

Enable Notifications OK No thanks