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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Bandzrt
A creator profile of Bandzrt, the Twitch and YouTube creator making Fortnite, PC optimization, FPS challenge, budget setup, and live clip content.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is Bandzrt?
Bandzrt is a Twitch creator and YouTuber who posts under the shorter YouTube name Bandz. His public bio is simple and very on brand: stay down till you come up. That line shows up on TwitchTracker, Twitch search results, and YouTube, and it fits the whole channel. Bandzrt has been making videos like someone trying to prove the setup does not have to be expensive for the content to hit.
Public tracker pages checked on July 5, 2026 listed Bandzrt as an English-language Twitch Affiliate with a channel created on January 18, 2025. Streams Charts search results showed 10,684 Twitch followers and 201 new followers in the recent 30-day window. TwitchTracker had him ranked in the top 1.32% of Twitch overall, which is a solid place for a creator whose Twitch account is still young.
His YouTube is the bigger public home right now. The Bandz channel showed about 64.9K subscribers, 68 videos, and the same stay-down-till-you-come-up bio. The feed is full of PC optimization videos, Fortnite performance tests, budget setups, FPS experiments, and stream-linked uploads that tell viewers exactly where to find him live.
Viewers love Bandzrt because the channel feels hungry. It is not a polished desk setup channel where every video starts with a perfect room and a sponsor wall. It is school PCs, thrift store setups, cheap parts, bad computers, new mice, low ping, Fortnite, loud titles, and a creator making every upload feel like he is trying to squeeze one more jump out of whatever machine is in front of him.
The PC videos are the main hook
Bandzrt's YouTube channel is built around one of the easiest gaming questions to understand: can this thing run better than it should? That is the reason a title like `Optimizing a $37 PC Until I Get 240 FPS` makes sense immediately. You do not need to know him yet. You just want to know if a cheap computer can somehow become playable.
That video has been one of his bigger anchors, with public YouTube metadata showing more than 222,000 views. The description said he bought the cheapest PC he could find and tried to optimize it for high FPS. It also had a `Family` counter at 21,089, which is useful because Bandzrt keeps treating the audience like a growing group instead of a random subscriber number.
That format kept working because it has a clean promise every time. `Secretly Optimizing a Library PC Until I Get 240+ FPS` passed 267,000 views. `I Secretly Optimized My School's PC to 240+ FPS` had more than 145,000 views after being published in May 2026. `Trying every pc optimizer so you don't have to` was above 72,000 views. The titles are loud, but the idea is simple: take a bad or weird setup and see if it can be forced into something playable.
That is why the channel feels more fun than a normal settings guide. Bandzrt is not only saying which Windows toggle to flip. He is turning optimization into a challenge video. The PC is the opponent, Fortnite is usually the test, and the payoff is watching the number climb.
Fortnite gives the channel its pressure
The optimization videos would not land the same if there was no game sitting behind them. For Bandzrt, that game is usually Fortnite. The mouse video says he bought the world's fastest mouse to revive his Fortnite career. The recent live-style upload from June 18, 2026 went straight for an all-caps Fortnite title. Search results also put his channel next to Fortnite FPS boost and PC settings searches.
That matters because Fortnite makes performance easy to feel. A higher FPS number is not just a benchmark screenshot. It means building feels cleaner, edits feel faster, and the game stops feeling like it is fighting you. Bandzrt's videos understand that better than a lot of tutorial channels. The real point is not that a Windows tweak exists. The point is whether the game feels playable after he tries it.
His Twitch clips also point back to Fortnite. TwitchStats search results showed Bandzrt clips from August 2025 while he was playing Fortnite, including clips titled `Melody` and `heil`. They are small public breadcrumbs, but they fit the same channel identity: PC performance, Fortnite, stream jokes, and clips that make more sense if you were there live.
That is a good lane for a young creator because it gives him two audiences at once. People who want better Fortnite performance can find him through the PC videos. People who like Bandzrt himself can stay for the streams, inside jokes, and the way every video feels a little like a dare.
The best videos feel like dares
Bandzrt has a very specific video instinct: put a ridiculous computer situation in the title and make viewers click because they want to see if it can possibly work. A $37 PC. A $27 thrift store gaming setup. A school PC. A library PC. A 2011 PC with a $1,500 graphics card. A Tesla being treated like a gaming PC. These are not normal setup reviews.
The June 2026 Tesla upload is a good example. `I Turned my $50k Tesla into a Gaming PC` had more than 30,000 views, and the description framed it as testing the limits of a Tesla's gaming ability. The May 31 upload, `Pushing My $5000 PC to Its Limits to Break the FPS World Record`, took the opposite route: not cheap hardware this time, but an expensive machine pushed as hard as possible.
That contrast is the channel. Bandzrt can make a budget PC funny because the machine is struggling, then make a big PC funny because the goal is absurd. He is not stuck doing only one kind of optimization content. He can move from low-budget repair energy to overkill FPS chasing and still sound like himself.
The common thread is that viewers know what they are getting before the video starts. There will be a computer, a performance goal, a lot of energy, and some version of Bandzrt trying to get more out of the setup than it should reasonably give him.
The audience grew fast
The YouTube RSS feed showed the Bandz channel first published in April 2024, and by July 2026 the channel was already around 64.9K subscribers. That is fast, especially for a creator whose lane is not built around celebrity collabs or giant event streams. The videos did the work.
The descriptions tell the growth story in a funny way because Bandzrt keeps writing the `Family` number. In the older $37 PC video, it was 21,089. In the May 2026 school PC video, it was 51,507. In the June 30 viral FPS tricks video, it was 64,440. Those are not official subscriber stats in the same way YouTube's channel count is, but they show how he was marking the climb in public.
That public climb is part of why the channel is easy to root for. You can see the same creator linking Twitch, Instagram, and Discord, using the same lines in descriptions, and still writing little thank-you notes at the bottom. It does not read like a giant media operation. It reads like someone trying to turn uploads into a real community.
His Instagram search result uses the line `THE GOLDEN CHILD follow me everywhere`, which also shows how he presents the persona outside YouTube. It is confident, a little unserious, and very much built for fans who already understand the joke.
Twitch is the smaller live room
Bandzrt's Twitch is not as big as his YouTube, but it gives the channel a live place to exist. Streams Charts search results showed 22 hours and 25 minutes streamed in the recent 30-day window, a 30 average-viewer count, a 69 peak, and 665 hours watched. TwitchTracker showed similar current-window numbers: 22 hours streamed, 30 average viewers, 65 peak viewers, and 199 followers gained.
That is not massive, but it is useful. The Twitch side lets people see Bandzrt between uploads, not only in finished videos. It also gives him a place to test jokes, play Fortnite, do louder live titles, and pull the YouTube audience into something more direct.
The Twitch profile and Twitch search snippets both use the same short bio as YouTube. That consistency matters more than it sounds. A viewer can find him from a YouTube short, a PC optimization video, a Fortnite clip, or the Twitch page and still land on the same identity.
That is the creator math here: YouTube brings reach, Twitch gives the core fans somewhere to gather, and the descriptions keep pushing people from one side to the other.
Where to follow Bandzrt
The main place to understand Bandzrt quickly is YouTube. The Bandz channel has the PC optimization videos, Fortnite performance experiments, budget setup ideas, and recent uploads that explain why people are finding him.
Twitch under `bandzrt` is the live channel. That is where the Fortnite streams, loud live titles, chat jokes, and direct audience time happen.
Instagram under `bandz.rt` is the public off-platform profile, and his video descriptions also point people toward the Bandz Gang Discord link. The cleanest public stats pages right now are TwitchTracker and Streams Charts, especially for follower count, Affiliate status, stream time, and recent viewership.
The quick version
Bandzrt is a fast-growing Twitch and YouTube creator with a clear lane: make PC performance, Fortnite, budget setups, and FPS chasing feel like entertainment instead of homework.
He has the numbers to back up the rise. Public pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed about 64.9K YouTube subscribers, more than 10K Twitch followers, Twitch Affiliate status, and recent Twitch streams averaging around 30 viewers.
Viewers love Bandzrt because the videos feel direct. He takes a bad PC, weird setup, school computer, thrift-store build, or overkill machine, sets a performance goal, and makes the process loud enough that even people who do not care about every setting can still watch.
Streamable is happy to support Bandzrt'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 Bandzrt, the Twitch and YouTube creator making Fortnite, PC optimization, FPS challenge, budget setup, and live clip content.
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?
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What if the issue still is not resolved?
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