Twitch Live Follower Comparison
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 !
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 ! 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 Follower Comparison puts two channels side by side and updates both follower counts live, about every ten seconds. You watch both numbers move at once, see the gap, and follow two charts showing who is gaining faster. Because Twitch growth comes in bursts tied to live broadcasts, watching two channels together tells you which stream is landing right now.
It is built for event nights. When two streamers are running subathons, racing to a milestone, or going live at the same time, the side-by-side view turns their growth into a live scoreboard.
You can compare two Twitch channels, or set a channel against a creator on another platform to see how their audiences compare.
The gap is the current standing. The charts are where it gets interesting, because on Twitch the numbers barely move when a channel is offline and jump when it is live. Two charts side by side show you exactly whose broadcast is pulling followers in at any given moment, spikes, raids, and all.
Both counts are public, the real follower numbers from each channel, refreshed every few seconds and shown together. We do not add followers to either side.
The gap is the current standing, but on Twitch the charts are where the action is. Follower counts here barely move when a channel is offline and jump when it is live, so two charts side by side show you exactly whose broadcast is landing right now.
When one streamer goes live and the other is dark, one line climbs while the other sits flat, and the race is really about who is on air. A raid can send one line jumping in a single step as a whole audience arrives at once.
Event nights make the best comparisons: two channels running subathons, two streamers in the same community racing to a milestone, or a collab where both go live at once. Channels of similar size and the same game make the closest races.
When both are broadcasting, you get two climbing lines and a genuine head to head the chat can rally behind. Put both counters on a stream overlay with the embed widget if you want viewers watching the race with you.
Why is one line flat? That channel is probably offline, since Twitch growth follows airtime. A flat line next to a climbing one usually just means one streamer is live and the other is not.
Can I compare across platforms, or put both counters on stream? Yes to both. The tool works across services, and the embed widget lets you show the race on an overlay.
Is it free? Yes, with no account needed, and either channel can be swapped out anytime.
We've got a wide range of social networks to choose from and track for.
Have you ever wanted to compare creators across different Social Media Platforms? With Livecounts.io we've made it possible.
Tips, guides, and insights for social media growth