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Online Casinos in general: Casino stream on Twitch (Page 8)

Topic created on 26th Jul. 2021 | Page: 8 of 11 | Answers: 103 | Views: 22,097
Anonym
DieWunderharke5000 wrote on 20/10/2022 at 17:14: Train, by the way, said he got paid a total of $360 million for the 16 months of casino streams. Those are already absolutely sick numbers

And apparently he wants to start his own streaming platform now

And last year he talked about a loss of 300 million. However, I think the 360 million is realistic.

Currently, many have switched to Dlive , in addition, there are other sites on which you can stream e.g. Youtube or Facebook. In addition, only 4 casinos have been banned on Twitch so far. The impact of the new guidelines is therefore manageable.

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supermode
Expert

Royal777 wrote on 10/20/2022 at 5:57 pm
And last year he was talking about a 300 million loss. However, I think the 360 million is realistic.

Currently many have switched to Dlive , moreover there are other sites on which you can stream e.g. Youtube or Facebook. In addition, only 4 casinos have been banned on Twitch so far. The impact of the new guidelines is therefore manageable.

I thought his losses would have been at 180 million, so I had heard that once.


But then Train had an even more hefty deal than Montana was offered, he was supposed to get 12 million per month.

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dersawen
Top Member
well losses, he gets the money provided

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Anonym
Either way, the young one has had it. Incidentally, it is still amazing that despite the lucrative business, there are still only a few Dozen German-speaking streamers

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frapi07
Expert

Royal777 wrote on 21.10.2022 at 16:30: Either way, the young has been taken care of. Incidentally, it's still amazing that despite the lucrative business, there are still only a few Dozen German language streamers

Train has an international audience, so the numbers are correspondingly higher. With German streamers, you will, except vllt. with Monte or Knossi, very difficult to crack the 1k viewers. You might ask why other Youtubers haven't gotten into this business model. One reason is probably that Germany is a country full of prejudices. You've seen it even with Monte or Knossi, how many people (including Youtubers) have criticized them for it. In the States, on the other hand, OC streamers are not criticized so harshly. I mean, even Drake is involved in it, even if he only sees that as an investment. If a music star of this height (Bushido or so) would make a similar business move here, he would only reap criticism from every corner. One wrong move and you can forget your career in Germany. Look at what the Youtuber Apored pulls through. Brags about luxuries he doesn't have, gets caught lying (even his scams are exposed) and now he's the laughing stock of the German Youtube scene. You might think that everyone forgets about it anyway at some point and that Youtube is not that important, but that is no longer true. A lot of explosive information can get onto the Internet, depending on the level of awareness. Anyone who has followed the Apored case also knows what his real name is, what his family situation is, what he has done, what scams he has pulled off, and so on. The guy certainly won't get a job in Germany without vitamin B and with his financial situation I would seriously worry about it (the guy is officially insolvent). Anyway, to get back to the topic: at some point, streaming will come to an end or it won't be lucrative enough and you'll have to go to work willy-nilly, which is why I can understand it if youtubers/streamers don't want to rely on a business model that is not well regarded by society.

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dersawen
Top Member
Royal777 wrote on 21.10.2022 at 16:30: Either way, the young has been taken care of. By the way, it is still amazing that despite the lucrative business there are still only a few Dozen German-speaking streamers

because you are only allowed to stream licensed casinos from germany and no one wants to see that and not everyone wants to emigrate for that.

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Anonym
frapi07 wrote on 22.10.2022 at 02:08

Train has an international audience, so the numbers are correspondingly higher. With German streamers you will, except vllt. with Monte or Knossi, very hard to crack the 1k viewers

There are quite a few German-speaking streamers with over 1,000 viewers, and dozens of streamers have four to five-digit subscribers. However, it does not play a significant role whether one has 100 or 1000 viewers.

One might ask why other Youtubers have not entered this business model. One reason is probably that Germany is a country full of prejudices. You've seen it even with Monte or Knossi, how many people (including Youtubers) have criticized them for it. In the States, on the other hand, OC streamers are not criticized so harshly. I mean, even Drake is involved in it, even if he only sees that as an investment. If a music star of this height (Bushido or so) would make a similar business move here, he would only reap criticism from every corner.

I am convinced that this is not the decisive point. Because this prejudice against gambling also exists in other countries, especially in the USA. Instead, I believe that most people are not even aware of this business model, and secondly, the moral as well as the ethical attitude is an aspect. On the other hand, there is a great interest in gambling in Germany. Key point lottery, which is supported both by the federal government and by the public law.

We owe the current restrictions on Twitch exclusively to the US community at
Incidentally, there are numerous public figures who have promoted gambling and still do. Be it a Sebastian Schweinsteiger or H.P Baxxter, as well as Bushido and Fler, who have already gambled more often on Twitch. Abroad, it looks no different (Ronaldo, Nadal, Tiger Woods).

. Look at what the Youtuber Apored pulls off. Boasts about luxuries he doesn't have, gets caught lying (even his scams are exposed) and now he's the laughing stock of the German Youtube scene. You might think that everyone forgets about it anyway at some point and that Youtube is not that important, but that is no longer true. A lot of explosive information can get onto the Internet, depending on the level of awareness. Anyone who has followed the Apored case also knows what his real name is, what his family situation is, what he has done, what scams he has pulled off, and so on. The guy will certainly not get a job in Germany without vitamin B and with his financial situation I would seriously think about it (the guy is officially insolvent)

I have never heard of Apored. According to Google there was once an article in the Kreiszeitung. Apparently a small artist who has not even been noticed by the population and rather hangs around in the Twitter bubble.

at some point streaming will come to an end or it won't be lucrative enough and you'll have to go to work willy-nilly, which is why I can understand it if youtubers/streamers don't want to rely on a business model that isn't well regarded by society.
Honestly, we're only at the beginning of the streaming era. But probably you are explicitly referring to gambling, however I don't see the peak until the next decade at the earliest.
DerSawen:
because from germany you are only allowed to stream licensed casinos and nobody wants to see that and not everybody wants to emigrate for that.
That's not right.
Entertaining fellow, yet you should not believe everything Hoody

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Julian
Elite

Royal777 wrote on 10/22/2022 at 07:04 AM

I have never heard of Apored. According to Google, there was once an article in the county newspaper . Apparently a small artist who hasn't even been noted by the general public and tends to hang out in the Twitter bubble.

Not true.
Until a few years ago, Apored was probably one of the most successful YouTubers in the German-speaking world, along with Leon Machere and Simon Desue. They were mainly known for their "fake pranks", which meant that they were always a topic of discussion among the other bigger influencers for years. - As already mentioned above by frapi07, he is currently under criticism because he had built up a construct of lies over the years and had pretended to his community that he apparently owns million-dollar companies incl. several expensive sports cars.
While in truth, however, he lives in a social apartment and currently has insolvency proceedings
This was revealed by the YouTuber "Miimii" and discussed in great detail in several videos.




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Anonym

Julian wrote on 10/22/2022 at 11:21 am

Not true.
Apored was probably one of the most successful YouTubers in the German-speaking world until just a few years ago, along with Leon Machere and Simon Desue. They were mainly known for their "fake pranks", which made them always a topic of discussion among the other bigger influencers for years. - As mentioned above by frapi07, he is currently under criticism because he had built up a construct of lies over the years and had pretended to his community that he apparently owns million-dollar companies including several expensive sports cars.
While in truth, however, he lives in a social apartment and currently has insolvency proceedings
This was revealed by the YouTuber "Miimii" and discussed in great detail in several videos.





If I enter "Apored" on Youtube, then only a few videos with 7-digit views appear xD I think that you only notice these influencers if you are actively in the scene.
Although I'm on Youtube daily, so I only learned about Rezo or Julien Bam at the last federal election. Both even live only a few hundred meters away from me.

Another example, "Blackpink." The group has tens of billions of clicks, did I know of their existence? No

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gamble1
Legend
frapi07 wrote on 22.10.2022 at 02:08

Train has an international audience, so the numbers are correspondingly higher. With German streamers you will, except vllt. with Monte or Knossi, very hard to crack the 1k viewers. You might ask why other Youtubers haven't gotten into this business model. One reason is probably that Germany is a country full of prejudices. You've seen it even with Monte or Knossi, how many people (including Youtubers) have criticized them for it. In the States, on the other hand, OC streamers are not criticized so harshly. I mean, even Drake is involved in it, even if he only sees that as an investment. If a music star of this height (Bushido or so) would make a similar business move here, he would only reap criticism from every corner. One wrong move and you can forget your career in Germany. Look at what the Youtuber Apored pulls through. Brags about luxuries he doesn't have, gets caught lying (even his scams are exposed) and now he's the laughing stock of the German Youtube scene. You might think that everyone forgets about it anyway at some point and that Youtube is not that important, but that is no longer true. A lot of explosive information can get onto the Internet, depending on the level of awareness. Anyone who has followed the Apored case also knows what his real name is, what his family situation is, what he has done, what scams he has pulled off, and so on. The guy certainly won't get a job in Germany without vitamin B and with his financial situation I would seriously worry about it (the guy is officially insolvent). Anyway, to get back to the topic: at some point, streaming will come to an end or it won't be lucrative enough and you'll have to go to work willy-nilly, which is why I can understand it if youtubers/streamers don't want to rely on a business model that is not well regarded by society.

With Apo, however, there are deeper reasons why he is currently not a laughing stock because he destroyed his career with a move, but because MiiMii has taken on the task of starting this destruction

Why he does not slowly times stands up and says I'm sorry I've done a lot of shit over the years and driven me totally against the wall understands no one so that sooner or later everything would be ok again

But if someone with the only reaction to his lies continues to lie (which one can then also still uncover all) and everything aggravates then one does not need to wonder why the career does not go well again

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