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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Arkyhler

A creator profile of Arkyhler, the Twitch streamer and social creator fans follow for everyday live streams, short-form clips, wrestling posts, gaming, and a stubborn comeback mindset.

Written by Ryan Trark

6 min readcreator spotlightarkyhlertwitchgamingwrestling

Who is Arkyhler?

Arkyhler is the online handle of Kayleb Stuple, a Twitch streamer, social creator, and everyday live personality whose public pages are built around the same blunt little promise: keep showing up. His Instagram bio says, `A minor setback paves the way for a major comeback.` His Twitch page keeps it even shorter: `Just a kid trying to make good changes while I am here.` That is not a polished brand slogan. It reads more like the kind of line someone keeps around because it still means something when the stream is quiet.

Public Instagram search metadata checked on July 5, 2026 listed `@arkyhler` at 10.5K followers, which gives him a larger public social audience than his live channel alone shows. The same Instagram profile names Kayleb Stuple, links out through his public social hub, and points viewers toward Twitch, TikTok, YouTube, Kick, and X. His Linktree uses the same Arkyhler identity and describes the page simply: `I STREAM EVERYDAY!!!`

The live side is more modest and more personal. Public Twitch pages describe him as a streamer who goes live on Twitch and keeps a loose mix of gaming, chat, wrestling fandom, and real-life updates moving across the week. That is the current Arkyhler read: not a giant channel pretending to be intimate, but a creator with a real off-platform audience trying to turn consistency into a bigger live habit.

That kind of profile is easy to miss if you only look at one platform. Twitch shows the room. Instagram shows the larger public identity. Linktree shows the cross-platform plan. YouTube shows the replay trail and music uploads. Put them together and Arkyhler looks like a creator still building the shape of the whole thing in public, one live day and one clip at a time.

How Kayleb built the handle

Arkyhler's public trail is very much a creator-in-progress story. The Instagram page is the cleanest starting point because it gives the real-name connection, the follower count, the G FUEL partner line, and the social links in one place. The account does not read like a detached portfolio. It reads like someone stacking pieces of their life online: streams, clips, wrestling moments, fan-event posts, music, and reminders that the comeback line is part of the bit and part of the person.

A lot of his public posts lean into wrestling and pop-culture moments. Search previews show a John Cena photo-op post, WWE and wrestling tags, and clips aimed at viewers who understand why a live reaction, a fan convention moment, or a wrestling reference can carry a whole post. That is useful context for the channel because Arkyhler is not only a game streamer sitting behind a random username. He has a visible taste lane: wrestling energy, loud reactions, clip-first humor, and the kind of fandom that turns one phrase into a running thing.

He also has a small public music trail under the Arkyhler and Kayleb Stuple names. YouTube and DistroKid-linked listings show songs like `Told You SO` and `2016 Again` released in 2026. Those tracks are not the center of the live channel, but they matter because they make the handle feel less like a single-platform experiment. Arkyhler is posting as a person who wants the name to travel across streams, short videos, music, and whatever else catches on.

That cross-platform part can look scattered from the outside, but it is normal for a young creator trying to find the version that sticks. Some days the best public artifact is a Twitch VOD. Some days it is an Instagram clip. Some days it is a short YouTube upload with almost no polish. The interesting part is the consistency underneath it: keep the handle alive, keep the socials connected, keep giving people a place to find the next live day.

What Arkyhler streams now

Arkyhler's live home is Twitch. Public Twitch pages for the handle describe the channel as active, and the public tagline is simple and a little vulnerable: he is trying to make good changes while he is here. That fits the stream better than a big genre label would.

The channel's current public shape is variety more than one locked format. Search results and recent public pages connect Arkyhler to gaming streams, Twitch VOD uploads, YouTube stream replays, WWE and wrestling posts, fan-event content, and everyday live captions. A recent YouTube upload titled `SCARY GAMEE TONIGHTTT GO W THE FLOW DAY 11` was described as broadcast live on Twitch, which gives a pretty good snapshot of the pacing: show up, pick the night, keep the day count moving, let the room follow along.

That kind of streaming is not built around perfect segments. It is built around presence. Viewers come in because they know the handle, the jokes, the comeback line, the wrestling references, or the way Arkyhler reacts when a game or chat gives him a weird moment. The content can be rough around the edges, but that is part of the appeal for a smaller live room. The stream is close enough that regular viewers can feel like they are part of the run instead of just watching a finished product.

The multi-platform setup also gives fans a few different entry points. Twitch is the live room. Instagram is the public face with the larger follower base. YouTube catches some music and stream-adjacent uploads. Linktree points everyone to the rest of the accounts. Kick and TikTok are part of the public social map too, even if Twitch is the main place to watch the current live version.

For a creator at this size, that matters. A single platform can make the audience feel smaller than it really is. Arkyhler's Instagram following shows that people already recognize the name outside Twitch. The live challenge is turning that recognition into repeat viewers who know when he is on, what kind of stream they are walking into, and why the next night is worth checking.

Why fans watch

Fans watch Arkyhler because the stream feels like someone still fighting for the next version of himself in public. That can sound dramatic, but it is right there in the way his pages talk: comeback, good changes, streaming every day. The appeal is not that everything is already huge. The appeal is that viewers can see the work happening while the channel is still close enough to feel personal.

There is also a clear fandom hook. Wrestling references, John Cena posts, WWE-adjacent clips, and convention-style moments give the audience something easy to grab onto. A viewer who likes wrestling understands the tone fast: big reactions, stubborn optimism, catchphrases, comeback arcs, and a little bit of theatre even when the stream is just a normal night online. Arkyhler's public pages do not hide that influence. They lean into it.

The gaming side gives the live room its rhythm. A scary-game night, a daily stream count, a Twitch replay, or a casual chat session can all work because the point is less about high-level gameplay and more about hanging with the same person again. That is a familiar lane for Twitch, but the better small channels make it feel specific. Arkyhler's version is tied to his name, his slogans, his wrestling taste, and the feeling that he is trying to make the audience part of the comeback rather than only asking them to watch it from a distance.

His Instagram scale helps too. A 10.5K-follower public page gives new fans a reason to believe there is already a community around the handle, but it is not so big that the live room feels unreachable. That middle space can be fun: the creator has enough public proof to be discoverable, while the stream still feels like viewers can actually matter there.

That is why Arkyhler is a good creator to catch while the channel is still taking shape. The pieces are visible: Twitch for the live nights, Instagram for the larger social crowd, Linktree for the full map, YouTube for stray replays and songs, and a public personality built around coming back after setbacks. Not every piece is perfectly clean yet. That is the point. Fans are watching the build.

Where to follow Arkyhler

The easiest place to watch Arkyhler live is Twitch. That is where the current live-room identity sits, and it is the place to check for new streams, VODs, clips, and schedule details. If someone only wants the live version, Twitch is the first stop.

Instagram is the best place to understand the bigger public profile. It carries the Kayleb Stuple name, the `@arkyhler` handle, the 10.5K public follower count seen on July 5, 2026, the partner note, and the pinned social context that points fans toward the rest of the accounts. It also gives new viewers a faster read on the wrestling and clip side of his personality.

Linktree is the clean map for everything else. It points to Instagram, Twitch, TikTok, YouTube, Kick, and X under the same Arkyhler identity. That is useful for fans because smaller creators often spread their best moments across a bunch of surfaces before one platform becomes the obvious home.

YouTube is worth checking for replays and side projects. The public uploads are not all one thing: there are Twitch replay-style videos, music uploads, and search results tied to the Arkyhler name. That makes it a catch-up page more than a polished archive, but it still helps fans follow the full public trail.

The quick version

Arkyhler is Kayleb Stuple, a Twitch streamer and social creator with a public Instagram audience above 10K, a connected social hub, and a live-channel identity built around consistency, gaming, wrestling references, and a comeback mindset.

His Twitch presence is the main place to watch him live. His Instagram shows the larger public audience and personality around the handle. His Linktree ties the rest together, including YouTube, Kick, TikTok, and X. The best way to understand the current run is to think of Arkyhler as a creator still building in public, with fans following because the process feels personal instead of packaged.

Viewers who like small-room Twitch energy, wrestling-flavored reactions, daily-stream momentum, and creators who keep showing up through awkward middle stages will probably understand the appeal fast. Arkyhler is not presenting a finished entertainment machine. He is showing the grind, the jokes, the side projects, the rough nights, and the next attempt.

Streamable is happy to support Arkyhler'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 Arkyhler, the Twitch streamer and social creator fans follow for everyday live streams, short-form clips, wrestling posts, gaming, and a stubborn comeback mindset.

How long should this setup take?

Most users can complete this in about 6 to 8 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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