3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Twitch

Twitch is the biggest name in live-streaming. Launched in June 2011, Twitch quickly became the go-to home for video game streamers, growing to tens of millions of monthly viewers within just a few years. Amazon acquired the company in 2014, offering the commerce giant a powerful competitor to YouTube, with an audience the Google-owned video platform has struggled to reach. Twitch is best known for being home to Fortnite streamers like Ninja and Tfue; e-sports like Overwatch and League of Legends; and new phenomena, including Grand Theft Auto V role-playing. It’s also expanded beyond games to include activities like social eating and musical performances.

Ash Parrish
Ash Parrish
Roll for initiative.

The phenomenal cast of Baldur’s Gate 3 is now live on Twitch playing a Dungeons and Dragons one shot as their characters. I don’t typically watch D&D actual plays, (sorry Critical Role fans) but I will be present and seated for this because I love all my murder hobo companions and I can’t get enough of them.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Post your Twitch clips right to TikTok.

Twitch launched the ability to edit vertical clips in its clips editor in May, and starting this week, you’ll be able to publish those clips directly to TikTok from the editor. Seems like a handy way to save a few steps.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Ninja has permission to multistream, Twitch’s CEO says.

Twitch’s terms of service only allow “simulcasting” on “Twitch-like” services with written permission, and CEO Dan Clancy confirmed that Ninja is cleared to do so. “We don’t have any problem with what Ninja is doing right now,” Clancy said.

Ninja often streams across multiple platforms at the same time. He has the leverage to be able to do so — Ninja, one of the biggest streamers out there, will be fine whether he can stream on Twitch or not — but it’s still interesting to see that Twitch is actually giving multistreaming permission to at least one person.

Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Twitch is making it easier to keep assholes out of your streams.

Twitch will soon allow streamers to block banned users from watching their streams. Twitch streamer Lowco reported that the new feature will be showing up in creators’ settings in September. Currently, bans only remove them from chat.

Bad actors can still circumvent this by signing out of a banned account, as it’s not an IP ban. But Trevor Fisher, a senior product manager for community health at Twitch, said the company is considering IP bans or other safety measures for future updates said in a video.

Jacob Kastrenakes
Jacob Kastrenakes
Rough news for the World Scrabble Championship, which was down to a peak of just 900 Twitch viewers this year.

Wait, sorry, my mistake: 900 is a “Scrabble-record audience,” according to Slate.

I love Scrabble, but there’s a dude asleep in bed right now who has over 1,000 concurrents.

Makena Kelly
Makena Kelly
The most abysmal policy debate I’ve ever seen ended with a multi-millionaire doing the worm.

Copyright law can’t seem to keep up with how fast YouTube and streaming trends evolve, so creators have long taken it upon themselves to set up industry norms for “react”-style videos.

Recently, Twitch and Kick star xQc caught a lot of heat for breaking those norms after posting what essentially amounted to reuploads of content by smaller creators.

He challenged YouTuber Ethan Klein to a debate over the merits of fair use, but the conversation devolved into... xQc doing the worm? I think there’s a real discussion to be had about copyright and content creation, but this definitely wasn’t it.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Kai Cenat’s AMP group posts first public statement since Friday’s “riot” in Union Square.

Popular Twitch streamer and influencer Kai Cenat is facing charges of inciting a riot at his giveaway event in New York City on Friday and hasn’t posted on social media since being released from custody on Saturday morning.

Now (via Variety), the first statement on the incident has appeared on the Instagram story for his AMP (Any Means Possible) group.

AMP statement: Yesterday members of AMP hoped to create a positing experience for fans and give back as a show of appreciation for their support....We are deeply disheartened by the outbreak of disorderly conduct that affected innocent people and businesses and do not condone that behavior. We apologize to all of those impacted, and we are fully cooperating with local authorities.
AMP Group - “We apologize to all of those impacted, and we are fully cooperating with local authorities.”
Image: AMP Group (Instagram)
Evo 2023: how (and what) to watchEvo 2023: how (and what) to watch
Ash Parrish
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Two more gambling sites, Blaze and Gamdom, are now prohibited on Twitch.

Since banning unlicensed gambling content last year, Twitch says gambling viewership on the site has dropped by around 75 percent.

Twitch posted more context in a thread on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

Update August 2nd, 2:53PM ET: Added a Twitch post from X.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Twitch is launching a new series of blog posts about its safety efforts.

The first post is focused on Twitch’s efforts to keep its younger users safe.

Ash Parrish
Ash Parrish
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of ...Twitch??

Twitch streamer Nutty has built the most incredible Twitch widget which will allow his viewers to play the Ocarina of Time. Viewers input ocarina commands in chat and a little Link avatar plays the notes. If chat can work together to input the commands for a known song (like the Song of Storms) Link will play the song in full just like he would in Ocarina of Time.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Twitch is finally making it easier to find new streamers to follow.

Twitch revealed a lot of new features today at TwitchCon, coming over the next few months.

Updates include a new discovery feed that will surface streamers you aren’t following; the ability to export clips to TikTok; a new shared streams update letting streamers go live on their individual channels during a Guest Star session; and a new “stories” format.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Despite protests in France, Twitch is still planning on hosting TwitchCon Paris next weekend.

“The venue is not near the epicenter of the protests, or any of the areas that have seen protest activity, and has continued to operate business as usual,” Twitch said on Twitter. The event is scheduled for July 8th and 9th.

The protests began earlier this week after a 17-year-old was shot by police.

A screenshot of a tweet about TwitchCon Paris shared by the Twitch account.
Here’s the link to the tweet.
Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Twitch star Félix “xQc” Lengyel has signed a $100 million deal with rival platform Kick.

Lengyel’s two-year deal with Kick is for about $70 million, with incentives making up the rest.

The deal isn’t exclusive — Lengyel says he will still be streaming on Twitch, though “not nearly as often” as before he signed this deal.

Meanwhile, Twitch walked back unpopular changes this month and introduced a new 70/30 split revenue sharing program as other platforms have begun to more aggressively court streamers.

Twitch’s new ad rules will hurt streamers, charities, and brands

Twitch’s new rules governing how certain kinds of ads can be displayed has caused confusion, fear, and anger among streamers.

Ash Parrish
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
I visit Twitch nearly every day, and somehow I didn’t know about Turbo until I had to write about it today.

And it wasn’t the best introduction — the subscription, which removes most ads, is getting more expensive! But you might be hearing more about Turbo soon, as the company promises that new features are on the way.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Twitch is launching its own alerts tool for streamers.

Many streamers already use third-party products to show alerts for things like new subscriptions or followers, but now Twitch is introducing its own alerts system. Streamers can access it from the creator dashboard.

Hopefully, the alerts aren’t too annoying — though one example in Twitch’s blog post on the news is a bit much.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The Washington Post has a big feature about Twitch’s recent struggles.

Take the time to read about Nathan Grayson’s big report about troubles at the Amazon-owned streaming platform, which just changed CEOs and is set to lay off “just over” 400 people. (I’d recommend reading Grayson’s Twitter thread about the story, too.)

How Twitch lost its way

[Washington Post]

After a string of creator controversies, Twitch is pretty sure it made the right changes

With new tools like Guest Star and improvements to existing monetization programs, Twitch believes it’s the best place for creators right now.

Ash Parrish
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Amazon’s layoffs included ‘just over 400’ job cuts at Twitch.

Twitch CEO Dan Clancy, who just stepped into the role on Thursday, shared the number as part of a new blog post shortly after the announcement of Amazon’s next huge wave of layoffs.

“Like many companies, our business has been impacted by the current macroeconomic environment, and user and revenue growth has not kept pace with our expectations,” according to Clancy. “In order to run our business sustainably, we’ve made the very difficult decision to shrink the size of our workforce.”

You can read more about Amazon’s layoffs in our post from earlier today.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Nothing, Forever, the AI-generated Seinfeld spoof, is indeed streaming again on Twitch... with new characters?

Larry, the Jerry Seinfeld stand-in, has seemingly been replaced by a bespectacled person named Leo. Twitch chat isn’t happy, but I’ll let you form your own opinion.