Streaming viewership among female streamers dropped in June, perhaps due to a lack of big events and collaborations. However, Spanish-speaking streamers took off, occupying four of the spots on this month’s leaderboard thanks to their mix of high energy IRL content and support for Twitch Drops campaigns.
Emiru
Emiru held onto the #1 spot for June with an average minute viewership (AMA) of 17.5K – a 1.5K increase from her performance in May. Emiru continued her streak of working with sponsors to pull in more viewers. She started the month off strong with a winning combination: Cosplaying as an MMA ring girl with streamers like PeachJars and Fandy while simultaneously co-streaming MMA.
alondrissa
Alondrissa held onto her status as the top Spanish-speaking female streamer this month, pulling in an AMA of close to 16K. Apart from hopping on the GTA V bandwagon, alondrissa spends most of her streams collaborating with other streamers such as CrystalMolly in podcast-style discussions. Her Rose Sunday streams are always fan favorites, feeling like a home-style hangout with friends.
rivers_gg
Rivers_gg narrowly lost out to alondrissa, with her AMA of 15K making her only the second most popular Spanish-speaking female Twitch streamer. Her content is diverse, showing her fan’s dedication as they follow her to games from Mario Party to Plants vs. Zombies. No doubt rivers_gg’s viewership was boosted by participating in the Rust Bellum Twitch Drops event, drawing more casual fans of her content back to the channel.
Valkyrae
Valkyrae continues to hold her ground as the only female YouTube streamer on the top 10 leaderboard with an AMA of 10K. Her GTA V RP’s are the primary focus of her streams, maintaining her loyal following. Valkyrae jumped on the Elden Ring bandwagon this month in light of the release of Shadow of the Erdtree, bringing in her highest viewership for June.
Kyedae
Kyedae continued to pull in a loyal viewership in June, bringing in an AMA of 9K. Kyedae continues to focus almost exclusively on VALORANT streams, but one of her more popular events saw her trying out a marathon 24 hour stream of VALORANT and other shooters – contributing to the marathon streaming revival kicked off by Kai Cenat.
CrystalMolly
CrystalMolly surfaced back into the top 10 female streamer leaderboard this month with an AMA of 8K. CrystalMolly’s ability to switch between gaming and IRL content is fantastic, collaborating with alondrissa for social content and then seamlessly switching back to gaming content from League of Legends to Super Mario Party. Like rivers_gg, CrystalMolly got the bulk of her June viewership from participating in the Rust Bellum Twitch Drops event.
aroyitt
Aroyitt broke into this month’s leaderboard for the first time with an AMA of just under 8K. Another Spanish-speaking streamer, aroyitt mostly makes gaming content based around shooters and GTA V. She’s also known by her real name Aroia Garcia on other social platforms. Aroyitt followed in the footsteps of rivers_gg and CrystalMolly by generating views from the Rust Twitch Drops campaign, showing the overwhelming popularity of the event.
Pokimane
Pokimane remains in the top 10 after streaming again on Twitch, hitting an AMA for June of just under 7.5K. Her frequent collaborations (such as the aforementioned cosplaying streams with Emiru) are popular among fans, whilst her competitive VALORANT gameplay is the core of her content. This was certainly the case for June, with Pokimane’s VALORANT collab with tarik bringing in a new influx of viewers.
ExtraEmily
ExtraEmily has continued her winning combination of travel, sports, and cooking IRL content in June, bringing in an AMA of 7K. Collaborating with other streamers like Fuslie and QTCinderella has broadened her viewership, leaving behind the gaming chair to try fun new activities like fire breathing. Her trip to the Schlitterbahn Water Park in Texas was a particular favorite among fans.
BotezLive
BotezLive are two sisters with radically different content to any of the other streamers on this list: They almost exclusively play chess. In a style reminiscent of the TV series The Queen’s Gambit, the two sisters take a sophisticated approach to their channel’s marketing while also branching out into similar intellectual old-fashioned games like poker. June saw BotezLive buoying their viewership with coverage of the Charlotte 2024 Carolina Classic.
Despite the lower than usual viewership for female streamers, their presence in popularity in gaming campaigns is encouraging. It will be interesting to see how channels like BotezLive that can’t rely on streaming trends to boost viewership will perform in the coming months. Stream Hatchet will be watching as these trends shift in July.
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