Twitch claims viewbotting streamers aren’t benefitting much from inflated view counts

Twitch has shared details about the impact of fake viewers (viewbots) on streamers, as they take action against those using them.

For a long time, streaming platforms have struggled with ‘viewbotting‘ – the practice of using automated programs to falsely increase a creator’s viewer numbers, leading to accusations of inflated statistics.

Even prominent figures in the streaming world, like Reed Duchscher, CEO of Night Media (who works with creators like Kai Cenat and Hasan), reportedly advised streamers to use viewbots, suggesting it was a common practice among their peers.

Twitch CEO Dan Clancy recently discussed the platform’s efforts to combat fake viewers (viewbots). He explained that streamers who try to artificially inflate their numbers aren’t actually seeing the advantages they expect.

Twitch CEO says viewbotters aren’t helping streamers get real viewers

Clancy says that people using viewbots aren’t really affecting how new streamers are discovered, so it’s not a major problem for them.

When browsing our discovery pages, you can sort results in two ways: from highest to lowest, or by a ‘recommended’ order. Currently, most users – about 60% – prefer the recommended sort over highest to lowest. We also automatically use the recommended sort for new and logged-out visitors.

Basically, while streamers who are viewbotting may show up first when sorting streams from most viewers, that’s not what users are using to find content.

According to sources, viewbots don’t really affect how videos are recommended. If you’re relying on the recommended videos section, viewbots won’t help your channel gain visibility.

Clancy’s data also shows that only 7% of popular 5-minute plays are found through browsing or discovery features. This suggests most viewers aren’t finding these plays that way.

I’ve been seeing a lot of talk about whether bots are messing with search results, and I was curious too. Good news – the team actually investigated this, and it turns out the impact on what you find is really minimal! @djclancy999 explained how it works, especially in categories where things are sorted in different ways on the web and on mobile.

— Twitch Support (@TwitchSupport) May 22, 2026

This should come as a bit of a relief for smaller streamers worried about not being seen because viewbotters are being recommended before they are.

Twitch is also limiting how many viewers a channel can have at once to fight against fake viewers (viewbots). Anyone caught using these bots will face increasingly stricter punishments.

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2026-05-25 23:49