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Streamable Creator Spotlight: akaElectro

A creator profile of akaElectro, the Twitch Partner and football-game creator known for Madden, College Football, challenge streams, YouTube Shorts, and a very loud live room.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightakaelectrotwitchyoutubemaddencollege football

Who is akaElectro?

akaElectro is an English-language Twitch Partner and football-game creator best known for Madden, EA Sports College Football, challenge streams, and short-form clips. TwitchTracker lists the channel as created in February 2017, Partner status, English language, and inside the top fraction of Twitch by its ranking snapshot. SullyGnome and TwitchMetrics both put the channel around 69K Twitch followers at capture.

Viewers love watching akaElectro because the stream feels like a football-game argument that never really cools down. It is Madden, College Football, team debates, wagers, challenges, chat getting loud, and a creator who knows exactly how to make a regular online match feel personal enough that people stay to see how it ends.

His public profile is also easy to recognize outside Twitch. YouTube lists the channel as `akaElectro`, with about 220K subscribers in metadata pulled from recent Shorts. Instagram and X use the same creator identity, and Famous Birthdays describes him as a video game player, live streamer, and content creator focused on Madden NFL and other football games.

That is the simple read on him: akaElectro is not a general variety streamer who happens to touch Madden once in a while. His whole public trail points back to football games, short clips, challenge rules, trash talk, and a community that likes watching him turn one matchup into a full event.

The Madden and CFB base

akaElectro's center is football gaming. TwitchMetrics says he usually streams Madden NFL 26 and ranked him #3 for Madden NFL 26 and #3 for English Madden NFL 26 channels in its recent 30-day snapshot. Streams Charts and SullyGnome both show Madden NFL 26, EA Sports College Football 27, and EA Sports UFC 6 around the recent channel trail, with Madden and College Football doing most of the heavy lifting.

Recent stream titles tell you what kind of show it is. TwitchMetrics listed `Stream CAN'T END until i WIN w/ EVERY School in CFB 27`, `Last Stream of MADDEN 26 -> Beat ME, GET $25`, and `Stream ENDS if I lose With COWBOYS`. Streams Charts showed titles like `GIVING AWAY CFB 27 CODES`, `Winning w/ EVERY SEC Team`, `Beat ME in a 1v1`, and `Chat GPT Chooses MY Team EVERY Game Madden 26`.

Those titles are not quiet ranked-grind titles. They are built like dares. Beat him and win money. Make him use a team. Put him down 21-0. End the stream if he loses. Run through every school. Let the chat watch him try to survive a rule he created for himself.

That is the part that makes his football-game content easy to understand even if you do not play every Madden release. The game is the field, but the stream is about pressure. Every match has a reason to matter, and the room gets to argue through the whole thing.

The Twitch numbers

akaElectro's Twitch channel is bigger than a normal sports-game niche channel. TwitchTracker's live snapshot listed 75 hours streamed, 341 average viewers, 612 peak viewers, 433 followers gained, rank #7,174 overall, #3,262 among English channels, and Twitch Top 0.11%. The same page listed the account as created on February 5, 2017 and Partner status.

TwitchMetrics had a slightly different current window because these pages update at different times. It listed 96 hours streamed, 33,207 hours watched, 344 average viewers, 543 peak viewers, 69,415 followers, English language, first seen February 5, 2017, and last seen July 4, 2026.

Streams Charts showed another recent view: 94 hours streamed, 32,063 hours watched, 341 average viewers, 612 peak viewers, 664 new followers, Partner status, English language, a USA audience center, and a February 2017 channel creation date. SullyGnome listed 69,432 followers, Partnered status, English language, and 89 hours streamed in the past 30 days.

None of those pages agree perfectly down to the last follower because every tracker catches the channel at a different time. They all tell the same story, though. akaElectro has a real live base, not just viral clips. A few hundred people showing up for long Madden and College Football streams is strong, especially when the content is so specific.

Recent live streams

The recent stream history is very on-brand. TwitchMetrics listed a July 2 College Football 27 stream that ran 11 hours with 383 average viewers and 475 peak viewers. On June 30, a Madden NFL 26 stream titled `Last Stream of MADDEN 26 -> Beat ME, GET $25` ran 5 hours with 376 average viewers and 543 peak viewers. On June 29, a Madden and UFC stream averaged 324 and peaked at 417.

Streams Charts had a similar row set, with July 3 showing `GIVING AWAY CFB 27 CODES -> Winning w/ EVERY SEC Team -> $50 if YOU BEAT ME`, July 2 showing the every-school College Football stream, June 30 showing the last Madden 26 stream, June 29 showing a Cowboys loss-rule stream, and June 28 showing a Packers loss-rule stream.

SullyGnome's 30-day page says Madden NFL 26 was his most streamed category in that window, with 66 hours, and that he also streamed three other games or categories. The related game boxes on SullyGnome included Madden NFL 26, EA Sports UFC 6, and EA Sports College Football 27.

That recent stretch explains the channel better than a bio sentence. akaElectro's stream is a sports-game lab where the rules keep changing just enough to make the next match feel watchable. The audience is not only waiting for a win. They are waiting for the challenge to blow up, for chat to get a reaction, or for a game that should have been over to suddenly become close.

The YouTube side

YouTube is a big part of why akaElectro feels larger than his Twitch follower count alone. Metadata from recent YouTube Shorts listed the akaElectro channel at about 220K subscribers. Search results also showed older channel results around the 216K subscriber range, so the exact number is moving, but the scale is clear.

The Shorts are almost all football-game language. Recent metadata showed titles like `Top 5 MOST OverPowered Players in College Football 27`, `Top 5 MOST OverPowered QBS in College Football 27`, `Game of the YEAR VS PrinceJMG`, `Does SPEED Matter in CFB 27?`, `The Best Passing Settings in College Football 27`, and `Is Electro Ranked 1 or 2 in CFB?`.

The view counts are uneven in the normal Shorts way, but the hits are there. One recent Short about overpowered College Football 27 players had about 60K views and over 1,800 likes. Another about speed in CFB 27 had about 41K views. A PrinceJMG game Short had more than 13K views. That is the same stream identity, just clipped down for people scrolling.

His longer YouTube side also matches the Twitch format. One June 2026 live upload titled `Beat ME in a 1v1, GET $25` was a long stream archive, not a tiny edit. That tells you the YouTube page is not only a highlight shelf. It also catches full football-game sessions for people who missed them live.

Clips, helmet, and the bit

akaElectro has a visual bit too. Famous Birthdays says he is known for wearing a white construction helmet in many videos, and that tracks with the way his clips are packaged: loud reactions, football-game chaos, and a creator who looks instantly recognizable even when the video is only a few seconds long.

TwitchMetrics' top clip section shows the same sports-game world. It listed clips like `judkins ops` and `He's hacking` from EA Sports College Football 25, `Kelce OP` from Madden NFL 25, and `Electro mewing` from EA Sports College Football 25. Twitch search results also surfaced clip pages like `#1 player in the world right here`, `you cant kick it`, and `Electro Slamming a Helmet`.

That clip set matters because it shows what people pull out of the live stream. They are not clipping quiet menu work. They are clipping busted plays, weird rules, reactions, helmet bits, player arguments, and Madden or College Football moments that make sense even without the whole VOD.

Sports games are built for that. A bad pass, a cheap touchdown, a comeback, a broken mechanic, a player speed debate, a wild fourth quarter, a rage pause: all of it can become a clip. akaElectro's channel leans straight into that instead of pretending the stream is only about playing clean games.

Why viewers watch akaElectro

Viewers watch akaElectro because he makes sports games feel less like background gameplay and more like a live bet between him and the room. The game might be Madden or College Football, but the hook is usually simple: can he actually win under the rule he just accepted?

He also understands that football-game viewers like arguments. Who is overpowered? Which team is fake good? Which quarterback is broken? Did the game bail someone out? Was that actually skill or just a bad animation? akaElectro's content gives people a place to have those debates while a real match is happening.

The best part is that the channel does not need a huge production wrapper to work. A challenge title, a loud chat, a close game, a few clips, and his reaction are enough. That is why the same format travels from Twitch to Shorts to Instagram-style posts without feeling like a different creator.

For fans of Madden, College Football, and messy sports-game drama, akaElectro is easy to get. He is the guy turning one more game into something chat can argue about, clip, replay, and bring up later like they were there for an actual matchup.

Where to follow akaElectro

Twitch is `akaelectro`, and that is the main live channel for Madden, College Football, challenge streams, money-match-style titles, chat tourneys, and the longer football-game sessions.

YouTube is `@akaElectro`, with Shorts, stream archives, and football-game videos. X is `@akaelectroo`, Instagram is `@akaelectrotv_`, and public Facebook pages also use the akaelectro name.

For stats, TwitchTracker, TwitchMetrics, Streams Charts, and SullyGnome are the useful public pages. They are the best way to check the current follower count, recent average viewers, recent categories, and stream history.

The quick version

akaElectro is a Twitch Partner and football-game creator known for Madden, EA Sports College Football, challenge streams, YouTube Shorts, and loud sports-game clips.

His Twitch channel has around 69K followers, a February 2017 creation date, English-language Partner status, and recent tracker snapshots around the low-to-mid 300s for average viewers.

His YouTube channel has about 220K subscribers in recent metadata, with Shorts and archives built around CFB, Madden, ranked arguments, team debates, and challenge formats.

Streamable is happy to support akaElectro'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 akaElectro, the Twitch Partner and football-game creator known for Madden, College Football, challenge streams, YouTube Shorts, and a very loud live room.

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

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What if the issue still is not resolved?

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