People can watch for free, subscribe for a small monthly support- the-artist style fee, or just throw money at them in the form of credits, a digital version of pelting wads of cash at a street performer. The set-up, if you’re unfamiliar, is this: you point a webcam at yourself and, as long as you remain more-or-less clothed, you are free to broadcast yourself doing whatever it is you do. And weirder still that Twitch is now one of the biggest websites on earth, with up to 500,000 performers streaming live on the platform every day and more than 1 million users watching them at any one time. It is weirder that culture has sharpened to a point where Twitch is a thing. Twitch started out for gamers, but now covers almost any live activity Though it started out as primarily for gamers, the site has since evolved into a teeming community with people existing, doing, being on camera, and essentially performing anything as long as it is live. If YouTube is a Fast & Furious-style summer blockbuster, Twitch is the concurrent Big Brother equivalent: live cameras, often at a fixed and unflattering angles, revelling in conversational silence. It feeds live from people’s living rooms, bedrooms and dedicated gaming rooms, out to thousands of devices at once. They are following his antics through Twitch, a website where you can watch people doing things. Ball specialises in tactical combat games where he chillingly explodes the heads of hundreds of competing gamers, and 507 people are watching him do it right now. I wonder briefly if anyone would pay to watch me play Fortnite in just my pants, and what dark, awful things I would do with the ensuing wealth. His kitchen is a palace and his dogs are adorable. His house is the most beautiful home I’ve ever been to. And now it supports him and a team of over 20. He started seven years ago on YouTube, then pivoted to Twitch. Behind there’s a looming greenscreen, as though Ball is an especially violent weather presenter in front, a bank of four computer screens, each streaming an unending loop of information.īall is a gaming streamer. This machine is used to kill people: three, so far, today, but there will be countless more over the next eight hours. It is a completely silent machine, an alien spacecraft, and pulses with orange-yellow tubes of coolant, which keep the graphics card and motherboard from melting out of it like an ice pop. C hris “Sacriel” Ball’s computer is worth £20,000 and looms over me like a monolith.
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