Streamer breaks Twitch record with month-long broadcast

14 April 2021, 10:44

The Twitch logo
The Twitch logo. Picture: PA

Ludwig Ahgren broke the record previously held by gamer Ninja.

A YouTube star has broken the record for the most paid subscribers on streaming channel Twitch after broadcasting himself non-stop for a month.

Ludwig Ahgren broke the record, set by gamer Ninja in 2018, when he passed 269,154 subs on Tuesday.

Mr Ahgren’s broadcast, which began on March 14, was a so-called subathon – a subscription marathon – in which he extended the length of the stream by 10 seconds for every new subscriber.

Closing out his stream on Tuesday night, Mr Ahgren said: “I can’t know any of you – 200,000 people on my stream right now – but somehow you guys as a collective made me really happy.”

Over the course of the month he has lived his life on camera – even keeping it rolling while he was asleep in his car-shaped bed.

As fans tried to push him towards the record owned by Ninja – real name Tyler Blevins, who is best known for playing Fortnite – he announced money from the final day’s subscriptions would go to charity, along with portions of earlier subs.

According to reports, the total he raised for charity was more than one million dollars (£725,000).

Ninja tweeted: “Records are meant to be broken, I would be lying if I said wasn’t a little sad but congrats @LudwigAhgren on holding the new sub record on twitch”

Twitch, which is owned by Amazon, is most well known as a platform on which gamers broadcast themselves playing video games, but it also has broader content including lifestyle channels.

It offers three levels of subscription ranging from 4.99 dollars (£3.62) to 24.99 dollars (£18.11).

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

A woman’s hand presses a key of a laptop keyboard

Competition watchdog seeks views on big tech AI partnerships

A woman's hands on a laptop keyboard

UK-based cybersecurity firm Egress to be acquired by US giant KnowBe4

TikTok�s campaign

What next for TikTok as US ban moves step closer?

A laptop user with their hood up

Deepfakes a major concern for general election, say IT professionals

A woman using a mobile phone

Which? urges banks to address online security ‘loopholes’

Child online safety report

Tech giants agree to child safety principles around generative AI

Holyrood exterior

MSPs to receive cyber security training

Online child abuse

Children as young as three ‘coerced into sexual abuse acts online’

Big tech firms and financial data

Financial regulator to take closer look at tech firms and data sharing

Woman working on laptop

Pilot scheme to give AI regulation advice to businesses

Vehicles on the M4 smart motorway

Smart motorway safety systems frequently fail, investigation finds

National Cyber Security Centre launch

National Cyber Security Centre names Richard Horne as new chief executive

The lights on the front panel of a broadband internet router, London.

Virgin Media remains most complained about broadband and landline provider

A person using a laptop

£14,000 being lost to investment scams on average, says Barclays

Europe Digital Rules

Meta unveils latest AI model as chatbot competition intensifies

AI technology

Younger children increasingly online and unsupervised, Ofcom says