Disguised Toast Speaks About YouTubers

Amiel Rose Andres - April 10, 2022
Disguised Toast Speaks About YouTubers

Jeremy “Disguised Toast” Wang, a popular Twitch streamer, has said that he respects YouTubers more than Twitch streamers. There’s a good explanation for it.

Twitch and Disguised Toast have a long history together. Despite exposing some critical revelations about the platform just weeks previously, he recently returned to Twitch. Twitch, according to the streamer, refused to offer Disguised Toast a bigger deal because the company already had other big-name Asian streamers. 

Disguised Toast continued to refer to Twitch as his “home,” tweeting that returning to the platform “made sense” because that was where many of his fans were. Disguised Toast, however, ran significantly additional issues with Twitch while on the platform. 

He was recently banned for streaming copyrighted television shows, which he later claimed was done on purpose to “scare other streamers.” 

During Matt Stonie’s episode of the OfflineTV Podcast, Disguised Toast revealed his thoughts on the streaming platform. YouTubers, according to Disguised Toast, are more respected than Twitch streamers. 

On the OfflineTV Podcast, Disguised Toast discussed the “ugly” aspect of streaming, calling himself jaded for knowing what it takes to make it large in the streaming world. Disguised Toast said; “I feel like I have more respect for YouTubers. But that also might be because I’m so deeply integrated with the streaming community. I know how the sausage is made, and it is ugly.” 

Youtubers can “exist independently” from other content creators, according to Disguised Toast. Streamers, on the other hand, will frequently rely on collaborations to expand and earn more money. This creates a “weird” dynamic in which streamers compete against one another while still having to collaborate. Disguised Toast said; “You can be successful on YouTube on your own, and that is more respectable to me than it comes down to who you know, who you collab with, and the amount of drama you farm.”

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