What does it mean to be authentic on Twitch? Who is real and who is fake on a platform where everybody is a brand, but also where a cornerstone of that brand is the appearance of down-to-earth chillness? This is the implicit question of the week on Twitch, and itâs all thanks to Imane âPokimaneâ Anys.
To kick off the week, the superstar streamer released a room tour video in which, as youâd expect, she walks viewers through her PC gaming setup and room. The video is very much in line with Anysâ brand: quirky, but polished to an immaculate sheen. The portion of her room that appears during streams is decorated with all manner of gaming and Twitch-related memorabilia, most of which adheres to a gentle, purple-hued color scheme. Past that point, her floors are pristine, her bed is made, and her closet(s) are organized. Even her catâs cat tree looks brand new, whichâas every cat owner on earth will tell youâis not a state they remain in for long.
Thatâs not necessarily to say itâs all some grand façade, however. Anys moves through the space with an easygoing, self-deprecating humor and is upfront about why sheâs doing this now.
âI try not to showcase too much just for security purposesâuntil Iâm about to move,â Anys says in the room tour video. âAnd then thatâs when I do my room tour. I am moving in three days. Really, really excited. A little bit nervous.â
Itâs a truth of streaming fame and fortune that big names infrequently acknowledge: some people try very, very hard to dox and swat famous streamers. These sorts of threats force many to overhaul how they live their entire lives. Coincidentally, this subject was recently discussed in stomach-churning detail by the biggest streamer who decided to parody Anysâ room tour: current Twitch king FĂ©lix âxQcâ Lengyel.
Lengyel, who recently moved due to âdailyâ police swattings, panned his webcam around his current (temporary) room during a July 5 stream, revealing a dual-monitor PC setup surrounded by half-eaten food, partially consumed beverages, and trash, strewn across both a desk and the ground. This was meant as a clear counter to Anysâ impeccably put-together space, which left Lengyel distinctly unimpressed
Viewers in chat were equal parts amused and grossed out by Lengyelâs temporary lodgings. On Reddit, commenters criticized him for making a mess while technically a guest in somebody elseâs home (heâs currently living with Chance âSodapoppinâ Morris and other streamers), while others made note of the fact that heâs a millionaire. One user basically summed it all up.
âGood lord, the dudeâs net worth is in the 8 figures and he lives like a college student getting a grocery allowance from mom,â one Redditor wrote. âMan just wants to shitpost and play video games. I respect it.â
Lengyel is not alone in this regard. Asmongold, Twitchâs premiere World of Warcraft (and now Final Fantasy XIV) streamer, also has a reputation for leaving empty food bags on his desk despite being wealthier than 99.9% of broadcasters on Twitch. While some find it hard not to poke fun at rich streamers recreating the âguys really live like thisâ meme, others sympathize. For example, after a day of playing Rust, fellow streamer and current Lengyel housemate Nick Polom posted his own room tour to Twitter yesterday.
âI know we give, like, xQc and a lot of gamers, like Asmon, a lot of shit for having desks that are kinda dirty, but yesterday me and [fellow streamer] Malena, we played Rust for 12 hours,â he said. âWe rarely ever play games. Look at the aftermath.â
Polom proceeded to reveal two desks strewn with food detritus, cans, and wrappers. âThis is just one day of playing games 12 hours a day,â he said. âImagine if we played more often.â
I get it @xQc & @Asmongold pic.twitter.com/yEDutYMbsG
— Nick Polom (@nmplol) July 6, 2021
This prompted an outpouring of similar responses from other streamers.
âThis is me after two hours,â said actress, musician, and streamer Sasha Grey.
Some people maintain their spaces better than others. This can be a product of time, mental health, or any number of other issues. As Anys recently pointed out, streamers are especially susceptible to having trash-inundated rooms because theyâre concerned that if they ever stop streaming to make food of their own, theyâll lose viewers. But on Twitch, itâs also come to signifyâeven if only in a tongue-in-cheek wayâa form of authenticity. If youâre a gamer on the grind at all times, the thinking goes, youâre not always going to have time or energy to clean up after yourself. Some, like Lengyel, seem to almost take pride in itâor at least, in the form of gaming-focused authenticity it represents. Audiences, too, see this distinction; much of Lengyelâs appeal lies in the fact that heâs basically the antithesis of more polished productions like Anys, Tyler âNinjaâ Blevins, and other top streamers who have followed in the wake of Twitchâs ascension into the mainstream. Heâs edgy and chaoticâa throwback to Twitchâs early, (almost) anything-goes days.
But itâs all ultimately performative, because every moment anybody spends on Twitch is a performance. Nobody is being their full, real selves during a livestream no matter how much they pretend otherwise. Being prim and proper is branding, but on a platform that prizes perceived authenticity above most other qualities, so is being a messy gamer. Lengyel is no more or less ârealâ than Anys, an unflappable, ubiquitous brand, but also a real person who has previously been unafraid to address touchy subjects like misogyny, her relationship with fans, and her own past as an edgy teenager. Their brands are just different, in some ways out of choice, in others out of necessity. Women, for example, are conditioned from childhood to be clean and are judged more harshly by society when theyâre not. If youâre a manâespecially one in his 20sâitâs basically expected that youâre going to be at least a bit of a slob. But thatâs just one small example.
These approaches to appearance and aesthetic open up different opportunities. Anys can link up with every major mainstream brand imaginable without being deemed fake or a sellout by her audience, because it fits her polished image. Lengyel can ink deals withquestionable gambling companies and not lose the trust of his audience, because they view him as a blend of messy edginess and harmless guilelessness. These statements are not value judgements; they are simply examples of how two very different streamers have adapted their brands to make a system work for them. On Twitch, appearances matter, and even a pile of trash on the ground can help you get ahead if you know how to use it.
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