Quick Answer
Jynxzi’s net worth is most likely around $8.5 million, with a realistic range of $4 million to $15 million based on public audience stats, subscription scale, and normal creator pay rates.
The reason the range is wide is simple: we can estimate income fairly well, but we cannot see his private expenses, taxes, investments, or contract terms. So this is a “best professional estimate” based on what’s visible publicly, not a guess pulled out of thin air.
The “Proof In Numbers” (Why This Isn’t a Normal Creator)
Jynxzi isn’t just big. He’s massive on both Twitch and YouTube at the same time.
Here’s what we can verify publicly:
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Twitch active subscriptions: ~81,587 active subs (with 28,231 paid + 12,151 gifted shown in the same snapshot)
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Twitch audience size: around 33K average viewers, with peaks up to 183K in the same performance view
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YouTube total views: 2.05B+ views and ~6M subscribers
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Estimated YouTube momentum recently: ~58.7M views in the last 28 days (public tracker estimate)
This is the key: a streamer with 80K+ subs is operating like a media company, not a normal “full-time creator”.
Who Is Jynxzi? (The Short Version)
Jynxzi (Nicholas Stewart) is a Twitch streamer and YouTuber best known for Rainbow Six Siege content, and he’s been one of the biggest “breakthrough to mainstream” stories in streaming in the last few years.
Where Jynxzi’s Money Actually Comes From
A lot of net worth articles online lazily say: “Twitch + YouTube + sponsors.”
That’s true, but it hides the important part: the size of each income stream is wildly different at Jynxzi’s scale.
Here’s the real breakdown.
1) Twitch Subscriptions (The Main Engine)
What we know
He’s sitting around 81,587 active subscribers publicly right now.
Even if you ignore the “hype numbers” and assume subs fluctuate (they do), that alone is enough to make Twitch subs his most reliable income base.
What does a Tier 1 sub pay a big streamer?
This depends on his subscription deal.
Most streamers are around a 50/50 split, but Twitch has the Plus Program, which can raise subscription revenue share to 60/40 or 70/30 based on “Plus Points.”
The important part
At Jynxzi’s level, he almost certainly qualifies for the 70/30 tier, because the thresholds are designed for big recurring subscription volume.
So instead of the old-school “$2.50 per sub” math, a top creator can be closer to $3.50-ish per Tier 1 (still varies by region and fees).
Subscription Income Estimate (Monthly)
Let’s keep it professional and realistic:
Low estimate:
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81,587 subs × ~$2.25 = $183,500/month
High estimate (Plus Program style share):
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81,587 subs × ~$3.50 = $285,500/month
✅ Estimated Twitch sub earnings: $180K to $285K per month
That’s $2.2M to $3.4M per year from subs alone.
Why the payout varies: Twitch uses local subscription pricing in some regions, so not every sub is worth the full U.S. Tier 1 value.
2) Twitch Ads (Big, But Not the Core)
Ads are weird on Twitch because:
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the CPM changes constantly
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ad blockers exist
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and streamers run different ad strategies
At high viewership, ads can still be meaningful.
Twitch has discussed multiple payout programs over time, and creators typically earn based on CPM and delivery (it’s not a flat “per viewer” rate).
A realistic monthly range
For a creator averaging ~33K viewers, ad revenue can easily land around:
✅ $20K to $120K per month
It depends massively on:
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how many ad minutes are run per hour
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whether he pushes aggressive midrolls
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and seasonality (Q4 usually spikes CPMs)
At Jynxzi’s size, ads are not the main income stream, they’re the bonus layer on top of subs.
3) YouTube Ad Revenue (Quietly Massive)
This is the part many people underestimate.
Jynxzi’s channel has:
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2B+ lifetime views
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and public trackers estimate ~58.7M views in the last 28 days
YouTube payouts depend on RPM, but the big picture is:
If a creator is getting tens of millions of views per month, YouTube alone can rival Twitch income.
Monthly YouTube estimate (based on public view momentum)
Using that recent view range as the “current energy level”:
✅ $30K to $150K/month from YouTube ads
(And yes, it can spike higher depending on long-form performance + ad market.)
That matches what public trackers suggest for his channel’s current pace.
4) Sponsorships + Brand Deals (The “Real” Big Money Tier)
At Jynxzi’s level, sponsorships are not “$500 per stream”.
They can be:
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mid 5-figures for a campaign
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6 figures for multi-post packages
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plus long-term retainers if brands want exclusivity
And he’s exactly the type of creator brands love:
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consistent audience size
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dominant in a specific game niche
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huge short-form clip virality
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strong personality-driven retention
✅ Estimated sponsorship earnings: $30K to $250K/month
Some months will be lower. Some months will be absurd.
5) “Extra” Income Streams People Forget
This is where net worth starts to climb fast:
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Merchandise drops
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Paid collabs and appearances
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Management deals and structured contracts
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Game partnerships and bundles (he’s had official Siege-related cosmetics)
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Secondary channels, clip channels, republishing
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Paid events / brand activations
This category is impossible to nail precisely, but at his scale:
✅ $10K to $80K/month is completely plausible.
How Much Does Jynxzi Make Per Month?
Stacking the realistic midpoints:
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Twitch Subs: $180K–$285K
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Twitch Ads: $20K–$120K
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YouTube: $30K–$150K
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Sponsorships: $30K–$250K
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Other: $10K–$80K
✅ Estimated total monthly earnings: $270K to $885K
✅ Estimated annual gross earnings: $3.2M to $10.6M
That’s why the net worth can’t be tiny. Even after taxes and spending, a few strong years at this level builds real wealth.
So… What Is Jynxzi’s Net Worth?
Net worth isn’t “how much he earns this month.”
It’s what’s left after:
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taxes
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expenses
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lifestyle
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investment choices
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big purchases
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and how long he’s sustained high income
Jynxzi’s major breakout era is relatively recent (late 2022 onward), but he’s been streaming since 2019.
My best estimate (StreamScheme-style)
Most likely net worth: ~$8.5 million
Realistic range: $4 million to $15 million
That range assumes:
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2–3 years of very high earnings
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and normal creator spending (not “living like a monk”, but also not blowing it all)
The Fast “Why He’s So Valuable” Explanation
If you want the simplest explanation of why Jynxzi prints money, it’s this:
He has the streaming holy trinity:
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A repeatable content format (Siege intensity + rage + reaction + quick payoffs)
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A built-in discovery engine (clips spread everywhere)
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A monetization stack that doesn’t rely on a single platform
If one piece dips, the others keep him afloat.
It’s the same reason we always tell creators to build beyond one traffic source in our guide on how to make money on Twitch.
What Streamers Should Learn From Jynxzi
Most people look at Jynxzi and only see:
“he’s loud and funny”
That’s surface-level.
The real lesson is: he understands what creates clips.
He doesn’t just stream. He streams in a way where moments are guaranteed.
If you want to reverse-engineer that skill, start here:
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How to get more viewers on Twitch (this is the conversion side)
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Twitch Discovery Feed playbook (Discovery is becoming a real growth lever)
And if you’re trying to understand what “top creator scale” actually looks like in numbers, our updated Twitch statistics breakdown helps put it in perspective.
FAQs
How many subs does Jynxzi have?
Public tracking tools show ~81,587 current active subs at the time of writing.
Subs move constantly, but he’s consistently been in the “elite tier” globally.
How much does Jynxzi make from Twitch subs alone?
A realistic range is $180K–$285K/month, depending on subscription payout rate and revenue share terms.
Does Jynxzi make more from YouTube or Twitch?
Twitch is likely his most stable income stream, but YouTube can absolutely rival it when monthly view volume is high.
How does Twitch’s 70/30 work now?
Twitch expanded the Plus Program so qualifying creators can reach 60/40 or 70/30 subscription revenue share based on Plus Points, and Twitch removed the old $100K cap for the 70/30 split.
Chris
Chris is a marketing major with a strong background in small business and influencer branding. He applies his knowledge of content and promotional strategies to design actionable advice for new and intermediate streamers. When he’s not busy crunching analytics, he can be found in the salt pits of League of Legends.


