Musings of a Streamer: Issue 14, February 2026

No Viewers? Stream Anyway!

I play games that no one watches.

Well… that’s not entirely accurate.

I play games that no one seems to want to watch me play.

Actually, let me try that again.

I play games that are so niche I rarely have viewers.

That’s closer. Still not quite it, though.

Here’s the truth: I have little to no motion in the streaming space. I have to accept that. I love playing video games on stream, despite how frustrated as I can get on stream. I enjoy sharing my journey through whatever world I’ve decided to throw myself into. The weird indie titles. The slow-burn RPGs. The games that have absolutely no viewers when you look them up on Twitch. 

Sometimes people pop in for a glimpse. A ‘hello’. A ‘first time playing?’ But most of the time, I’m alone in my enjoyment, playing with the quiet hope that someone will stumble upon me like they accidentally clicked the wrong category and decided to stay out of curiosity. I’m not streaming the hottest new release. I’m not chasing the trending category.

I’m just… playing what I want to play.

And that comes with consequences.

Low viewership. Quiet chats. The occasional bot trying to sell me ‘professional graphics’ as if that’s the missing piece to my wildly niche indie title that has zero momentum in the greater gaming community. 

It’s funny, really. The advice you see floating around streaming spaces is almost always the same: Play trending games. Find your niche, but not too niche. Be discoverable. Think strategically. Maximize your time. Optimize your content. Repurpose everything. Grind. Grind harder. Why aren’t you grinding?

And I get it. I really do. In past Musings I had similar suggestions. There’s logic behind that advice. Growth on streaming platforms is brutally difficult. Discoverability is a joke most days. If you want numbers, you have to be intentional and you have to ensure you are spreading your content around.

But here’s the thing no one likes to say out loud: streaming that way kills the joy of streaming and playing video games. If I forced myself to stream only the games that ‘perform well,’ I’d burn out in a month. If I chased every trending release just to maybe catch a few stray viewers, I’d stop caring about the experience itself. And if I turned every stream into a calculated growth experiment, I’d lose the reason I started doing this in the first place.

I stream because I love games. Not because I love metrics. Or people… 

There’s something oddly peaceful about streaming a game with zero expectations. This is something I’ve had to teach myself… Throughout 2025, and now the thing I really want to emphasis in 2026. When there’s no crowd, there’s no pressure. I can explore at my pace. I can read every bit of lore. I can get stuck on a puzzle for twenty minutes to an hour without feeling like I’m wasting someone’s time. I can react honestly instead of performing constantly. It becomes less of a show and more of a shared space. Even if that space is mostly empty.

And yeah, sometimes that emptiness stings. I won’t pretend it doesn’t. There are moments where I glance at the viewer count and feel that tiny punch in the gut. That voice that whispers, ‘Why bother?’ Like everyone, I’d love to have a consistent viewer base. But the longer I’ve been doing this, the more I’ve realized I don’t need it. 

I love finishing a game and knowing I saw it through, even if no one else cared. It’s the rare moments when someone does pop in and stays for the journey that and I get to light up. Those moments feel earned. They feel authentic. They feel like me.

There’s also a strange confidence that comes with embracing obscurity. When you accept that you’re not chasing trends, you stop measuring yourself against people who are. You stop doom-scrolling. You stop asking why someone else grew faster. You start asking better questions.

Am I enjoying this?

Am I proud of what I’m building?

Am I happy?

And honestly Yeah. To all of it. Not every day. I’m not that enlightened. But most days? Yeah. Because even in the quiet, even in the low-view streams, there’s something grounding about showing up for yourself. About saying, ‘This is what I like. This is what I’m playing. And I’m okay with that.’

It doesn’t mean I’ve given up on growth. It doesn’t mean I don’t want more people hanging out. Of course I do. I’d love a lively chat. I’d love regulars. I’d love community.

But I don’t want those things at the cost of losing my love of streaming and playing games. If growth comes, I want it to come because people vibe with what I already enjoy doing. Not because I twisted myself into a being someone who isn’t their truth self. 

So yeah. I play games that ‘no one watches.’