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Streamable Creator Spotlight: ABBASOOV

A creator profile of ABBASOOV, the Russian-language Twitch IRL streamer known for Moscow streams, bar nights, chat-led bits, and fast-growing live numbers.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightABBASOOVtwitchirlrussianmoscow

Who is ABBASOOV?

ABBASOOV is a Russian-language Twitch streamer whose channel is built around IRL first. The current public picture is pretty clear: Moscow streams, bar runs, party plans, friends on camera, chat commands in the title, and a lot of live segments that feel like they can start or stop anywhere.

Viewers love watching ABBASOOV because the channel feels like someone brought chat into a real night instead of trying to make a perfect studio show. Recent public titles point at Papa Moscow bar, Patriarch's Ponds in Moscow, driving to a party, going to a bar, a Camry accident situation, and guest streams with other creators. You do not need fluent Russian to understand the format: it is movement, reaction, people, and chat poking the whole thing forward.

Public trackers checked in early July 2026 showed ABBASOOV around 26K to 27K Twitch followers. TwitchMetrics listed 26,794 followers, Russian language, first seen on March 9, 2023, and IRL as the usual category. SullyGnome listed 26,828 followers, Affiliate status, Russian language, and a Twitch creation date of June 29, 2022.

The account is not huge compared with the biggest Russian IRL creators, but it is very active and very much alive. That matters more here than a clean bio paragraph. ABBASOOV's story is in the stream list.

The Moscow IRL format

ABBASOOV's recent stream titles make the channel feel very location-based. StreamRecorder's July 2026 list showed sessions around Moscow movement, Papa Moscow bar, driving to a party, going to Patriarch's Ponds, and home or car situations with guests. TwitchMetrics also showed IRL-heavy streams around a car accident title and a long July 2 broadcast that split time between IRL and Just Chatting.

That gives the channel a rough street-level shape. It is not travel content with a clean itinerary. It is more like chat following someone through a night: get in the car, go to a place, meet someone, deal with a problem, start a new segment, restart the stream, keep talking. The titles often include donation and task commands too, so chat is not just watching quietly.

The Russian-language layer is a big part of it. The words are loud, direct, and casual. A lot of the titles read like someone typed the plan quickly and left the mess in because the regulars already get it. That can make the stream feel closed to outsiders, but it also gives the room a real voice.

For fans, the appeal is that ABBASOOV's stream feels unpolished in a useful way. You are not watching a creator pretend a random night is a movie. You are watching someone keep the camera on while the night is still being figured out.

A fast recent month

ABBASOOV's recent numbers are strong for a mid-sized IRL channel. TwitchMetrics showed a June 5 to July 5, 2026 monthly panel with 2,694 followers gained, 41,890 viewer hours, an 833 viewer peak, and 141 hours live. Its FAQ for the same profile listed 296 average viewers in the last 30 days.

SullyGnome was close, but not identical, which is normal for third-party trackers. It listed 141 hours streamed, 41,160 hours watched, 290 average viewers, an 833 peak, 21 streams, and 2,402 followers gained across the past 30 days. TwitchTracker's visible panel showed 145 hours streamed, 311 average viewers, an 867 peak, and 2,655 followers gained.

The exact numbers shift by tracker and update time, but the pattern does not. ABBASOOV has been streaming a lot, averaging around 300 viewers, and adding thousands of followers in a month. That is not a dead channel getting a courtesy profile. That is a live room picking up speed.

The follower gain is especially interesting. Going from about 25K to around 27K followers while keeping more than 140 hours live means the growth is probably coming from repeated exposure, not only one lucky clip.

Where ABBASOOV sits in Russian IRL

TwitchMetrics ranked ABBASOOV as the #163 most watched IRL channel overall and #20 among Russian IRL channels in its last-30-day profile. That is a useful way to place the channel. ABBASOOV is not at the very top with the huge Russian IRL names, but he is high enough in the Russian IRL list that the channel is clearly visible.

The Russian IRL category is crowded and weird in the way IRL usually is. Some channels are massive personality shows. Some are city walks. Some are party streams. Some are streamers making chat part of errands, relationship drama, car trips, bars, or whatever else the day gives them.

ABBASOOV's current public lane sits closer to city-night IRL than calm walking. The recent titles are about Moscow movement, bars, parties, driving, accidents, guests, and donation-phone style bits. That makes the stream feel more social and messy than scenic.

That also explains why the average viewer number matters. Around 290 to 311 average viewers is enough for chat to have weight. In IRL, chat needs to be active because the streamer is often reacting to the room, the street, and the screen at the same time. ABBASOOV's recent numbers suggest the room has enough people to keep pushing back.

Streams that restart and keep moving

One funny thing about ABBASOOV's recent archive is how chopped up it can look. StreamRecorder showed 226 tracked streams, 264 hours and 21 minutes of tracked airtime, 51 active days, and an average of 4.4 streams per active day since May 7, 2026. StreamArchive also showed several July 5 sessions in short blocks: 50 minutes, 50 minutes, an hour and 40 minutes, then another 50 minutes.

That kind of pattern is common for IRL. Phones die, signal drops, locations change, people move, and the stream comes back as a new VOD. From the outside, the archive can look chaotic. For regular viewers, it is just part of following a mobile stream.

StreamRecorder also listed IRL as the top tracked category, followed by Just Chatting and a small amount of I'm Only Sleeping. SullyGnome said IRL took 74 of the recent 141 hours. TwitchMetrics showed recent streams split between IRL and Just Chatting. All three sources point the same way.

ABBASOOV is not pretending to be a gaming-first streamer. The live world is the content.

Clips and social posts

ABBASOOV has a public Instagram under `abbasoov_23`, and search results showed about 5.6K followers, a bio pointing people back to Twitch, and posts built around Twitch clips and Russian short-form edits. That fits the main channel. The Instagram does not look like a totally separate brand. It looks like a place where stream moments get turned into quick pieces for people who already know the name.

Twitch clip search results showed a bunch of Russian-titled clips around confessions, regular days with Abbas, club clips, jokes, and random IRL moments. Some of those clips are small, some are old, and some are hard to load in-browser, so this profile does not treat any single clip as a huge turning point.

The useful takeaway is simpler: ABBASOOV's channel creates clip-shaped situations because IRL is always giving him people, places, and small disasters. The clips are not polished sketches. They are little pieces of a stream that already feels unstable in a good way.

Kick also has an ABBASOOV page with about 1.8K followers, but it does not look like the main public base right now. Twitch is the center.

Why viewers watch ABBASOOV

Viewers watch ABBASOOV because the stream feels like it can turn fast. One title is a bar. Another is a car issue. Another is a party. Another is Moscow movement with guests. That is the whole IRL promise: you are there before the night has decided what it is going to become.

The channel also has the kind of Russian chat energy that does not bother explaining itself to outsiders. Commands, slang, guest names, and quick title changes all make it feel like a regular room. If you get it, you get it. If you do not, you can still understand the broad shape from the camera and the pace.

His recent growth gives the channel extra weight. Adding thousands of followers in a month while keeping around 300 average viewers means people are not only clicking once. Enough viewers are coming back for the live room to keep moving.

That is the cleanest way to describe ABBASOOV right now: a Russian IRL streamer with an active Moscow-centered stream, a growing audience, and a channel that is better understood by watching a night unfold than by reading a polished bio.

Where to follow ABBASOOV

The main place to watch ABBASOOV is Twitch under `abbasoov`. That is where the IRL streams, Moscow nights, Just Chatting blocks, and recent growth are happening.

Instagram is `abbasoov_23` for short-form clips and story-driven updates. Kick exists under the same name, but the public data points back to Twitch as the main channel.

For stats, TwitchMetrics, TwitchTracker, SullyGnome, StreamRecorder, and StreamArchive are the useful public pages. Together they show the same thing: a Russian-language IRL creator streaming often, gaining followers, and pulling a real live room.

The quick version

ABBASOOV is a Russian-language Twitch IRL streamer with around 26K to 27K followers and a current profile centered on Moscow nights, bar streams, guests, driving segments, Just Chatting, and chat-led bits.

Public trackers in early July 2026 showed about 141 to 145 recent hours streamed, around 290 to 311 average viewers, an 833 to 867 recent peak, and more than 2K followers gained in the last 30 days.

TwitchMetrics ranked ABBASOOV #20 among Russian IRL channels in its profile snapshot, which makes the channel a real part of the current Russian IRL mix.

Streamable is happy to support ABBASOOV's streams and help keep them running clean so he can stay live without dealing with tech issues.

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What does this guide help with?

A creator profile of ABBASOOV, the Russian-language Twitch IRL streamer known for Moscow streams, bar nights, chat-led bits, and fast-growing live numbers.

How long should this setup take?

Most users can complete this in about 7 to 9 minutes, depending on their current setup.

Where should I start first?

Start from the first section in this guide and follow each instruction in order.

What if the issue still is not resolved?

Re-check each setting in this guide, restart OBS, and test again. If needed, contact Streamable support or join Discord for help with your exact setup.

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