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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Days
A creator profile of Days, the Kick Partner behind Count Your Days As Blessings, Just Chatting streams, IRL clips, TTS moments, and song battles.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is Days?
Days is a Kick Partner whose public channel line is short and memorable: `Count Your Days As Blessings.` Public pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed the Kick channel above 26,000 followers, with Streams Charts listing the account as an English-language Kick Partner based in the United States.
The channel is not hard to place once you look at the recent stream titles. It lives mostly in Just Chatting and IRL, with titles like `Friday Stream lost in thought POV`, `SONG BATTLES $$$`, and `Straight ballin today`. That is very Kick: part hangout, part bit, part chat room, part long late-night stream that can become something weird if enough people stay.
KickBot's public page for Days showed 26,253 followers and the same `Count Your Days As Blessings` line. It also exposes a big TTS setup, which tells you a lot about the channel before you even watch. Days is not running a quiet stream where viewers only type and wait. Chat is part of the sound of the show.
The public trail is smaller outside Kick, at least from the sources that are easy to verify. That is fine. Days reads like a Kick-first streamer, and the main story is the live room: long streams, chat jokes, TTS, song battles, IRL clips, and a community that seems very used to talking back.
The Kick stats show a real live room
Streams Charts listed Days at more than 26K Kick followers and showed a recent 30-day window around 84 hours streamed, 147 average viewers, and a 197 peak. The same page listed an all-time Kick peak above 50,000 viewers on January 28, 2024.
That recent average is not giant compared with the biggest Kick names, but it is real. A 100-plus average viewer room is enough for chat to keep moving, TTS to matter, and every small turn in the stream to get a reaction. It is also the exact size where the creator can still feel close to the viewers instead of sounding like they are talking over a stadium.
StreamRecorder showed a similar live rhythm from another angle. Its public Days profile tracked 40 streams, more than 152 hours of airtime, 28 active days, and a last-seen date of July 3, 2026. It also listed recent streams like `Friday Stream lost in thought POV`, a July 2 comeback/dayzerthon stream, and `Straight ballin today`.
The recent schedule reads like a streamer who can sit in the chair for a while and let chat steer the night. That matters for Days because the channel's best public clues are not polished trailers. They are the stream titles, the TTS page, the clips, and the way the community talks through those tools.
TTS is part of the channel
Days has one of those channels where TTS is not just an add-on. KickBot's public voice page showed recent TTS messages, a 30-day TTS leaderboard, subscriber, VIP, and mod voice groups, and a long voice menu. That tells fans the stream is designed for viewers to interrupt, joke, test the room, and become part of the audio.
You do not need to repeat the actual messages to understand the room. The page makes the format clear. Viewers are not only chatting in text. They are paying or earning their way into the stream's sound, and the rest of chat reacts to whatever lands. That kind of room can get messy fast, but it is also why people keep TTS streams open in the background.
The channel's public titles fit that setup. `SONG BATTLES $$$` is not a passive title. It sounds like a night where chat is expected to argue, vote, clown, and react. `Friday Stream lost in thought POV` is looser, but it still gives people a reason to sit down and listen. The stream can be a contest one night and a late-night talk room the next.
That flexibility is a big part of Days. The channel does not need every stream to start with a perfect premise. It needs the room, the chat, the TTS tools, and enough live personality to turn a small idea into a few hours.
The clips make the channel easier to picture
Streams Charts' public Days page listed popular clips with titles like `Days kicked out of private yacht club`, `Pressed by a Squirrel`, `Flash Dance Days`, `Jump for Jump`, `Only You Can Prevent Litter`, and `Chasing Sake with water`. Those titles are small, but they say more than a clean biography would.
They show a streamer whose channel can move between IRL, random physical comedy, public interactions, and chat-ready moments. A squirrel clip, a yacht club clip, a jump clip, a flash-dance clip, and a song-battle title all point toward the same type of live room: not polished, not over-explained, and probably better when you are there as it happens.
That is the value of a clip trail. Fans do not always need a big origin story to understand a streamer. Sometimes they need to see the channel's repeated situations. Days keeps ending up in titles that sound like something happened, not titles that were written by a manager before the stream started.
The public Kick category context also helps. Days shows up around Just Chatting and IRL, not a single game. That gives the stream room to be a walking segment, a talking segment, a music segment, or a chat segment without confusing the regulars.
Why fans watch
Viewers keep showing up for Days because the channel feels easy to jump into. You do not need to know a tournament bracket, a server lore document, or a full cast of characters before you can understand what is happening. The title gives the room a shape, chat talks, TTS fires, Days reacts, and the stream becomes whatever the night turns into.
That is a very specific kind of creator skill. It is not the same as being a high-production show host. It is more about being willing to sit in the mess, let chat talk, take the jokes without losing control of the room, and keep moving even when the premise is thin.
Days also has a simple public phrase that fans can remember. `Count Your Days As Blessings` sounds like a channel motto, a joke, and a reminder all at once. It is the kind of line that works on a profile page because it does not need a paragraph of explanation.
The channel also benefits from being very easy to clip. A TTS reaction, a song battle turn, a weird IRL moment, or a small chat argument can all become the thing people send around later. Days' public clip titles make the channel feel alive even when you are only seeing the aftermath.
The recent viewer range also helps the channel feel personal. A room averaging around 147 viewers can still have regular names in chat and a TTS leaderboard that people recognize. That makes the stream feel less like a broadcast and more like a place where certain viewers can actually become part of the night.
Where to follow Days
The main place to watch Days is Kick under `Days` or `DAYS`. That is where the public follower count clears 26K and where the recent Just Chatting and IRL activity shows up.
Streams Charts is the best public stats page for the channel, especially if you want follower count, Partner status, average viewers, stream hours, recent titles, and popular clips in one place.
KickBot is useful for understanding the interactive side. The clips page shows the channel tagline and follower count, and the TTS voice page shows how much viewer audio is built into the room.
StreamRecorder is useful if you want the recent VOD trail: the tracked streams, last-seen date, public stream titles, airtime, and how often the channel has been live since it started tracking the account.
The quick version
Days is a Kick Partner with more than 26K public Kick followers, a channel line of `Count Your Days As Blessings`, and a live format built around Just Chatting, IRL, TTS, song battles, and chat-driven bits.
Public pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed Days streaming regularly on Kick, with Streams Charts listing the channel around 84 recent hours streamed and StreamRecorder showing more than 150 tracked hours since May 2026.
Fans watch because Days gives them a room to be part of: chat talks, TTS lands, the title sets the mood, clips come out of small live moments, and the stream does not need to be too clean to be fun.
Streamable is happy to support Days' 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 Days, the Kick Partner behind Count Your Days As Blessings, Just Chatting streams, IRL clips, TTS moments, and song battles.
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.
