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Streamable Creator Spotlight: AlexiaRaye
A creator profile of AlexiaRaye, the Twitch Partner and longtime online creator known for Pokemon streams, cozy games, Vine and GLAMSS history, YouTube, Instagram, and plant-based recipes.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is AlexiaRaye?
AlexiaRaye is a Twitch Partner and longtime internet creator whose channel now sits somewhere between cozy gaming, Pokemon, Just Chatting, older social-media nostalgia, and a very normal "hi, come hang out" kind of stream. Her Twitch bio says she studied biochemistry at UAB before becoming a full-time content creator, and her own website says the same thing in the context of gaming, cooking, and trying to make healthier food feel less boring.
Viewers love watching AlexiaRaye because she has been online long enough to feel comfortable without sounding like she is performing a perfect streamer version of herself. She can do Pokemon for hours, talk through whatever is going on, make the room feel casual, then have this whole other side where she posts recipes and food content under the same Alexia Raye name.
The channel is also not some small side project. Public tracker pages checked in July 2026 put AlexiaRaye around 376K Twitch followers, Partner status, English language, and more than a decade of channel history. TwitchTracker lists the account as created on August 6, 2014. SullyGnome has the same creation date, and TwitchMetrics lists her as first seen on August 6, 2014 too.
That matters because AlexiaRaye is not a sudden one-month spike. She is part of the older creator internet: Vine, YouTube collab channels, Twitch, Instagram, TikTok, recipes, gaming clips, and long-running fan recognition all stacked together. The current Twitch stream is just the place where all of that is still live.
Before the current Twitch routine
AlexiaRaye has one of those internet trails where different fans probably found her in completely different eras. Some people know her from Twitch. Some remember the Vine days. Some know the old GLAMSS collab-channel name. Some found her through YouTube. Some probably only know the Pokemon streams.
Famous Birthdays lists her as a former member of the YouTube channel GLAMSS and says she was also popular on Vine before the app shut down, finishing with more than 450,000 Vine followers. Its separate GLAMSS page describes the group as a 2014 collab channel with Alexia Raye listed among the members. That is not the whole story of her career, but it explains why she had a fan base before a lot of newer Twitch viewers ever saw her live.
Her personal YouTube channel kept that older creator side visible. Search results for the channel list `@alexiaraye`, more than 110K subscribers, and hundreds of videos. Older uploads include Q&As, Vine reactions, travel clips, TikTok-trend videos, and TwitchCon interview content. The YouTube bio points people back to her Twitch and says she plays games, mostly Pokemon, on stream almost every day around 9AM CST.
That old internet background is a big part of the appeal. AlexiaRaye does not feel like someone who learned streaming from a 2026 growth thread. She feels like someone who has been through multiple versions of being online and is still here, just with a Twitch chat, Pokemon, cozy games, and a community that already understands her speed.
The Twitch channel now
AlexiaRaye's Twitch right now is mostly Pokemon and cozy gaming, with Just Chatting and variety mixed around it. TwitchMetrics said she usually streams Pokemon Pokopia, while SullyGnome listed Pokemon Pokopia as her most streamed category over the checked 30-day window. Streams Charts' recent rows showed titles like `today we take on rocky ridges`, `EEVEELUTION BUILD DAY`, and `ICE BUILD`, which tells you the current stream language pretty clearly.
The vibe is very specific: morning or daytime gaming, chat in the room, Pokemon builds, cozy-game pacing, and enough creator history that she does not need to over-explain herself every five minutes. A viewer clicking in for the first time sees a Pokemon stream. A regular viewer sees Alexia doing the thing she has made feel familiar over years.
TwitchTracker's July 2026 snapshot listed 79 hours streamed, 197 average viewers, 274 peak viewers, and a negative follower change in the selected period. TwitchMetrics listed 70 hours live, 13,940 viewer hours, 196 average viewers, 269 peak viewers, and 376,436 followers in its one-month window. Streams Charts listed 64 hours and 45 minutes of airtime, 12,634 hours watched, 195 average viewers, 273 peak viewers, 74,868 live views, and 376K followers.
The exact numbers move because every tracker updates at a different time. The shape is what matters: a very established Twitch Partner with hundreds of thousands of followers, current average viewership around the high-100s to low-200s, and a schedule that still shows regular live hours instead of a dormant legacy channel.
Pokemon, cozy games, and chat
The current stream pattern makes AlexiaRaye easy to place without boxing her in too hard. Pokemon is the obvious anchor. TwitchMetrics listed three visible late-June streams around Pokemon Pokopia: June 30 for six hours with 180 average viewers and 217 peak, June 29 for seven hours with 215 average and 262 peak, and June 28 for five hours with 214 average and 258 peak.
Streams Charts had similar recent rows: June 30 at six hours and 183 average viewers, June 29 at six hours and 25 minutes with 219 average, June 28 at four hours and 55 minutes with 209 average, June 26 at four hours and 25 minutes with 201 average, and June 25 at two hours and 30 minutes with 172 average. Those are not wild spike rows. They look like regular streams where the same audience keeps showing up.
SullyGnome's stream table tells the same story from a slightly different window. It listed June 16 at four hours, 190 average, and 228 peak; June 6 at 5.2 hours, 191 average, and 246 peak; June 5 at 3.7 hours, 176 average, and 227 peak; June 4 at 4.7 hours, 208 average, and 260 peak; June 3 at 6.5 hours, 185 average, and 227 peak; June 2 at 4.1 hours, 164 average, and 219 peak; and June 1 at five hours, 207 average, and 246 peak.
That consistency is the interesting part. A lot of older creators have huge follower counts and quiet current channels. AlexiaRaye still has a real live room. The audience may not be at old peak scale every day, but the stream is active, the schedule is alive, and the Pokemon/cozy-game crowd has a clear reason to keep coming back.
The cooking side is real too
AlexiaRaye's creator identity is not only games. Her own site is built around recipes, with categories for main courses, sides, salads, soups, sauces, snacks, sweets, and breakfast. The front page shows recipes like Single Serve Baked Oats, Not-So-Sloppy Joes, Meatless Subs, Black Bean Enchiladas, Crunchwrap Supreme, Krabby Patties, Raspberry Chia Jam, and Jalapeno Poppers.
The about page gives that side more context. Alexia says she studied biochemistry at UAB, became a full-time content creator, loves video games, and wanted to bring fun back into cooking while pushing against pure convenience food. She also says the recipes avoid meat and dairy, that she is plant-based rather than strictly vegan, and that her friends test the food before recipes make it to the site.
That part makes her stand out from a lot of gaming creators. It is not random merch, a one-off brand deal, or a half-finished personal blog. It is a whole public site with years of recipe posts. The archive visible on the homepage goes back through 2020, 2021, and 2022, with posts written under Alexia Raye's name.
For fans, it gives the channel more texture. AlexiaRaye is the Pokemon/cozy Twitch streamer, but she is also the former biochemistry student who can talk about plant-based recipes and then go live to build Eeveelutions. That mix is pretty clearly why the audience around her does not feel like it came from one single platform.
Socials and fan reach
AlexiaRaye is also much bigger off Twitch than a single tracker page can show. Instagram search metadata listed `@alexiaraye` at 251K followers, 304 following, and 944 posts. YouTube search results listed `@alexiaraye` at 111K subscribers and hundreds of videos. X search results describe the account as Pokemon, cozy games, and a little bit of spice, with links to the wider AlexiaRaye account set.
That split makes sense for her. Twitch is the live home. YouTube is the old archive and video channel. Instagram is the polished personal/photo/social side. The recipe site is the cooking side. TikTok and other short-form platforms sit around it. Fans do not have to follow every version, but the same Alexia name keeps showing up.
The nice thing is that none of it feels impossible to connect. Her Twitch bio talks about biochemistry, UAB, Pokemon, Overwatch 2, and variety games. Her site talks about biochemistry, full-time content creation, gaming, and cooking. Her YouTube points people to Twitch. The names and interests line up instead of feeling like separate rebrands.
That is probably why AlexiaRaye has stayed recognizable across so many eras. She has changed platforms, formats, and hobbies in public, but the through-line is still easy to read: games, personality, food, long-running internet fluency, and a community that has had a lot of time to grow up with her.
Where to follow AlexiaRaye
Twitch is the main place to watch AlexiaRaye live. That is where the Pokemon streams, cozy gaming, Just Chatting, and regular audience hangout happen.
YouTube is the best place to see the longer video archive and older creator history. Instagram is the main public social profile. Her personal site is where the recipe side lives, especially the plant-based meals and cooking posts.
For stats, TwitchTracker, TwitchMetrics, SullyGnome, and Streams Charts all point to the same basic picture: a longtime English-language Twitch Partner with more than 376K followers, active current streams, Pokemon near the center, and an audience that still shows up live.
The quick version
AlexiaRaye is a longtime online creator and Twitch Partner known today for Pokemon, cozy games, Just Chatting, YouTube history, Instagram, and a real plant-based recipe site under the Alexia Raye name.
Her own bio says she studied biochemistry at UAB before becoming a full-time content creator, and her Twitch bio connects that same background with Pokemon, Overwatch 2, and variety gaming.
Public July 2026 tracker pages showed about 376K Twitch followers, Partner status, English language, account creation on August 6, 2014, and current average viewership around 186 to 197 depending on the tracker.
Streamable is happy to support AlexiaRaye's streams and help keep them running clean so she can stay live without dealing with tech issues.
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