

pokimane
@pokimane
Followers
Promote your Twitch channel to 12,000+ daily viewers
Get Spotlight ยท $15/wk โAbout pokimane
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Twitch Live Follower Counter is the best way to check your Favorite Creator's Statistics updated in real-time! Data seen on Most Social Medias might be inacurate or delayed, that's why Livecounts.io came with idea for Twitch Live Follower Counter!
Everything is directly taken from official API Service provided by Social Networks. Every single count is updated every 2 seconds and is as accurate as possible.
To search for specific channel simply click "Change User" button below Follower Count Box, type your favorite creator's username and you're good to go! This IS NOT case-sensitive thus you type for example "MrBeast" or "MrBeAsT" and it should still work!
If you're interested in watching Follower Count battle then navigate to Compare Page below Follower Count Box or on Navigation Bar.
Thanks for using Twitch Live Follower Counter! If you have any idea to improve the website then feel free to get in touch with us it on our Twitter page.
The Twitch Live Follower Counter tracks a channel's follower count and refreshes it about every ten seconds. Twitch shows a streamer their follower count inside the dashboard, but there is no easy public way to watch it move, especially during a live stream when it matters most. This tool gives you that view: the follower number updating on its own while a channel is on air.
The follower count is the focus here. Twitch growth tends to happen in bursts tied to whatever is happening on stream right now, so the number and the chart beneath it tell you when a broadcast is landing. A raid, a big clip, or a breakout moment shows up as a sudden climb you can watch in real time.
You can embed the counter on a stream overlay so viewers watch the number climb with you, or use the compare tool to run two streamers side by side during an event or a subathon.
Twitch is different from feed-based platforms because the action is the live broadcast. Followers don't trickle in evenly through the day. They arrive in waves when a channel is on air and something worth following happens. Watching the counter during a stream tells you, more or less instantly, whether a moment connected.
The number is public, the same follower count on the channel's Twitch page. We read it every few seconds and chart it. We do not add followers or estimate them. During a big raid you will see the count jump as a whole audience arrives at once, and the chart makes that spike obvious.
Flip on Advanced Metrics for the rate gauge, the total gained since you opened the page, and an average per minute. For a streamer running a subathon or a milestone stream, those numbers become part of the show, a live scoreboard the whole chat can rally around.
The flat stretches matter too. When a channel is offline, the counter mostly holds steady, which is a useful reminder that on Twitch, growth and airtime are tied together more tightly than on any other platform here.
A lot of streamers run this counter on screen during a broadcast. The embed widget gives you a clean count you can drop into OBS or any overlay, so the chat watches the follower number climb in real time along with you. During a milestone stream or a subathon, that on-screen number becomes part of the show, a shared goal the whole audience is pushing toward.
Mods often pair it with the compare tool on collab nights to put two channels on screen at once. It takes nothing to set up: grab the embed snippet from the counter page and add it as a browser source.
Why does the count barely move sometimes? Twitch growth is tied to airtime. When a channel is offline, few new followers arrive, so the counter mostly holds. When the channel goes live and something lands, it climbs. A flat line usually just means the stream is off.
What happens during a raid? When a channel raids another, a whole audience can arrive at once, and you will see the follower count jump in a single step. The chart makes that spike obvious. It works for any public channel, though a banned or deleted channel has no public data left to read.
Is it free? Yes. No account, no fee, and ads cover the cost. Search a channel and watch.
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