Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Features

Twitch streamer Myth talks moving away from Fortnite

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

At 19, Ali “Myth” Kabbani has more than 6.7 million followers, many of which he gathered as a prolific Fortnite streamer. But at the height of his success, he’s turning away from the game that made him big.

Recommended Videos

Kabbani has slowly started transitioning out of playing Fortnite full-time over recent months. He’s started picking up other battle royale favorites, including Apex Legends and Valorant. It’s a substantial risk when a streamer switches away from the game that made them famous, a risk that not even Kabbani is immune from.

“You have your audience that’s going to stay with you and those that will leave,” Kabbani said. “The question is how I tap into that [new] audience, and what’s going to make me different from the rest of the streamers.”

For Kabbani, that meant keeping up the same high-octane energy and enthusiasm that his fans grew to love while showing he can excel in an entirely different environment. After all, gameplay can only get you so far on Twitch. The real key to success is to be entertaining.

Kabbani sets himself apart by being just like everyone else. Literally. He does impressions of other streamers, pop culture icons, and political figures. It’s made him identifiable not only on Twitch but also throughout social media. Clips of his voice-altered exploits will trend on Twitter and the LivestreamFails subreddit, which is dedicated to chronicling interesting or scandalous clips from online personalities.

“I love doing impressions and playing characters,” Kabbani said. “It’s really exciting to dive into another person or character’s mindset and try to make something convincing and believable for the person watching so they feel that they are watching someone else.”

Kabbani has perfect that art of the impressionist streamer that, by now, it feels natural, but like many Twitch success stories, it took a while to get there.

Kabbani says he’s been gaming since he was 2 years old, and began streaming in 2016. He started by streaming Paragon, a third-person Epic Games MOBA that never really caught on. That meant Kabbani’s streams weren’t catching on either. In 2017, he switched to the newly minted Fortnite, another game from Epic that showed more promise.

The move worked.

Kabbani was invited to Twitch’s partner program, an elite group of just 27,000 out of the 2 million active broadcasters the streaming site boasts in total. He’s also gotten sponsorships from big-name brands like Sonic and Samsung.

Now, as Kabbani hopes to replicate his success already having achieved streaming fame, the Myth message isn’t about follower counts. Kabbani says it’s about “cultivating a community that spreads the message that encourages people to believe in themselves, think critically, and think for themselves — develop healthy lifestyle habits while dominating in video games.”

Steven Asarch
Former Digital Trends Contributor
You don’t need a Switch to play Mario Kart. This YouTube video somehow lets you join the race.
Someone smuggled Rainbow Road into YouTube, and it kind of works
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

A pair of creators has found a way to make YouTube more than just a video streaming experience. You can now play Mario Kart inside it. Atlas Arcade and Animated Subtitles have created a fan-made interactive video that lets desktop users drive through Rainbow Road using keyboard controls.

It lasts just over a minute and offers a stripped-down version of the familiar kart-racing experience, yet the technical trickery behind it is far more interesting than its size suggests. This is not an official Nintendo release or a complete browser port of Mario Kart. It is a YouTube video twisted into behaving like a game, and that may be even cooler.

Read more
Xbox spins off four studios, including Senua-maker Ninja Theory, as mass layoffs begin
Thankfully, these cuts won't lead to cancellation of any publicly announced first-party games or projects.
Project Helix Xbox Asha Sharma Featured

Microsoft's Xbox division has kick-started a big reset today, a move it has been hinting at for weeks. The company has announced layoffs covering approximately 3,200 roles throughout 2027, of which nearly half of the roles are being terminated starting today. Additionally, the gaming arm is letting go of four studios, including Ninja Theory, which developed the smash hit Senua series of games. Notably, the company assures that none of the first-party games that have already been announced will be affected or cancelled.

What's happening?

Read more
Google executive ports Command & Conquer Generals: Zero Hour to iPhone and Mac using Claude
A classic PC RTS is now running natively on iPhone, and Claude helped make it happen
Computer, Electronics, Animal

AI-powered game development has recently been blamed for flooding app stores with low-effort mobile games, but every now and then, the technology produces a far more interesting result. Google lead product and design executive Ammar Reshi says he used Fable 5 to port Command & Conquer Generals Zero Hour to the iPhone and iPad.

This is not an emulator or a cloud-streamed version. According to Reshi’s GitHub page, the actual 2003 game engine has been compiled natively for ARM64 and runs on iPhone, iPad, and Mac. The project uses EA’s GPL source release and builds on existing community work, while adding the iOS and iPadOS port.

Read more