LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: Richard Tyler Blevins or simply known as Ninja, is a popular online streamer who recently revealed his Twitch earnings accidentally. On November 15, he gave his fans a sneak peak into his earnings from the last 30 days.
For those who are not verse with, Ninja was streaming alongside Complexity part-owner Cloazy when he closed out of a tab of the game Fortnite, and showed his desktop with an open Twitch dashboard.
How much does Ninja earns?
During the livestream, Ninja, accidentally revealing his earnings said, ''Ah, you guys got a little sneak peek at the TTV earnings this month, guys,'' he said after exiting the dashboard.
The dashboard shows the number of hours streamed and money earned from October 15 to November 15. Based on his performance, Ninja was able to stream for 102 hours in the previous month, maintain 23,828 members, and make $142,177 in 30 days on the popular gaming streaming site.
The video gained wide attention on X (previously known as Twitter), as a prominent sports personality Jake Lucky shared Tyler's earnings on his official handle, writing, "Ninja leaking his Twitch dashboard to remind us all how it feels to be leasing a vehicle, still renting, and having extra steak at Chipotle be an achievement."
Ninja got his fame streaming himself playing video games back in 2017 when Fortnite was hitting its peak in popularity. He currently has over 12 million followers on Instagram and over 23 million subscribers on YouTube.
Internet reacts to Ninja's earnings on Twitch
Within few days of being uploaded, the video on Twitter had more than 2 million views and several comments.
A user wrote, "Life changing money made in one stream holy."
Another user wrote,"yep dat ad revenue be balling lately."
The next user said,"Good for him! Love him or hate him, he's paved the way for a lot of us streamers and I'll always have the utmost respect for him."
While one user went on saying,"Im just tryna pay rent man."
A user said, "same guy who complained about not making revenue for a year while multistreaming."
While a user said, "Skill issue."