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Streamable Creator Spotlight: kebcioo

A creator profile of kebcioo, the Polish Twitch and YouTube Fortnite creator also known as Kebcio, with Twitch history, FNCS streams, and Fortnite tools.

Written by Ryan Trark

6 min readcreator spotlightkebciookebciotwitchyoutubefortnite

Who is kebcioo?

kebcioo is a Polish Twitch creator whose channel bio keeps it very simple: `Siema jestem Bartek`. On Twitch, that is basically the whole front door. No giant manifesto, no polished media-kit paragraph, just Bartek saying hi and letting the channel history do the rest.

Public TwitchMetrics data checked in July 2026 listed the channel at about 54,800 Twitch followers, with Polish as the language, March 13, 2015 as the first-seen date, and May 31, 2026 as the last-seen date. SullyGnome showed almost the same follower count and also listed the channel as Polish, created on March 13, 2015.

Viewers love watching kebcioo because he feels tied to a very specific lane: Polish Fortnite, long-running online history, and the kind of creator who can move between Twitch, YouTube, tournaments, and side projects without needing to turn every platform into the exact same thing.

The Fortnite name

A lot of the public trail around kebcioo points back to Fortnite. TwitchMetrics listed his visible 2026 stream history as Fortnite, and his recent titles were built around FNCS, including `IRL STREAM Z FNCS`, `FNCS FINAL DAY`, and a May tournament stream. That is a pretty clean signal for what people associate with him.

The older competitive trail is there too. The Fortnite Esports Wiki lists `Kebcioo` as a Fortnite esports player from Poland, with Europe residency, 600 power-ranking points in 2019, and a Trio Cash Cup 2 Europe result from July 21, 2019 alongside SixooN and GiboN. It is not a full biography, but it does place the name inside Polish Fortnite history instead of only modern YouTube search results.

That older Fortnite context matters because his current content does not look like a random jump onto a trend. The Twitch account itself dates back to 2015. The competitive listing goes back to 2019. The public videos and tools still circle Fortnite. Even when the Twitch channel is not constantly live, the name has been around the game for years.

What his Twitch looks like

kebcioo's Twitch is not a high-volume daily channel right now. TwitchMetrics showed zero hours streamed in the most recent 30-day window when checked, and SullyGnome's 365-day view showed only a few hours streamed across that longer window. That sounds quiet, but the follower count says people still know the name and still have the channel followed.

The May 2026 streams are short, but they are useful. TwitchMetrics showed one May 31 stream titled `IRL STREAM Z FNCS` that ran for 14 minutes, another `FNCS FINAL DAY` stream that ran for 33 minutes, and a May 4 tournament stream that ran about an hour. All three were Fortnite streams, with peak viewers landing around the low hundreds.

That makes the channel feel more like an event-check-in place than a daily grind room. When he goes live, it seems connected to Fortnite, FNCS, tournaments, or whatever is happening around the game that day. Fans who follow him on Twitch are not necessarily getting a set schedule. They are getting a place where Bartek can pop back in when it makes sense.

The bio matches that casual setup. `Siema jestem Bartek` is not overthought. It gives Polish viewers enough to know they are in the right place, and it leaves the rest to the creator name. For people who already know Kebcio from YouTube or Fortnite, that is probably enough.

The YouTube side is bigger

The bigger public story is on YouTube under Kebcio. YouTube search metadata showed a bunch of Fortnite uploads with serious reach, including `60 DNI DO PRO w FORTNITE`, `60 DNI DO PRO: CHEATER NA FNCS`, `I PLAYED FORTNITE FOR 60 HOURS STRAIGHT`, and `Zrobilem SYMULACJE WOJNY w Fortnite`. Several of those were sitting in the high six figures or over one million views when checked.

That YouTube style says a lot about why people follow him. It is not only raw gameplay. The titles are built around big, easy-to-understand ideas: a documentary-style push toward pro play, FNCS drama, long Fortnite challenges, war simulations, tournaments, and extreme custom-game concepts. That is the exact kind of Fortnite content that works when the creator can make the setup clear fast.

The YouTube channel also helps explain why Twitch can be quiet and still matter. A creator can be much bigger on edited Fortnite videos than live hours. If fans mostly know Kebcio through YouTube, the Twitch channel becomes an extra door into live moments, not the whole house.

That is a normal path for gaming creators now. Some fans want the main video. Some want the behind-the-scenes live stream. Some only show up around FNCS or a tournament. kebcioo sits in that mix, where the live channel and the edited channel do different jobs.

The kebcio.pro project

kebcio.pro adds another piece to the profile. The site is a Polish Fortnite tools project built around free browser tools, including a Battle Bus drop calculator and a custom crosshair tool. The page tells users to enter a Fortnite map, finish it, and use a one-time code to unlock the tools. The listed map code is 8387-1113-4501.

The drop calculator is especially on-brand. The site describes it as a tool that takes the Battle Bus route and a chosen landing point, then helps calculate the best jump timing and flight path while accounting for glider deployment and map terrain. It also says the tools work in the browser and do not modify the Fortnite client.

That is a very Fortnite-creator kind of side quest. It is part content idea, part community project, part utility for players who care about landing better. It also fits with the YouTube side, because the site points users back to YouTube and Discord and frames the tools as something shared with viewers.

The page also says Kebcio had been working quietly on another project for two years, connected to mousecat.gg. That is not enough to build a whole section around, but it does show he is not only uploading videos and disappearing. There is a builder side to the public profile too.

Why fans follow

Fans follow kebcioo because he is not hard to place. He is Polish, Fortnite-heavy, and tied to a name that has been visible across Twitch, YouTube, esports listings, and Fortnite tools. For people inside that lane, that is enough context to understand why the channel still has more than fifty thousand followers even when the recent live schedule is light.

There is also something nice about a creator page that is not trying to explain itself to every possible viewer. If you know Polish Fortnite, Kebcio makes sense fast. If you do not, you can still read the trail: FNCS streams, Fortnite documentaries, big challenge videos, tools for players, and a Twitch bio that introduces Bartek without turning the page into a pitch.

The YouTube ideas are probably the easiest entry point for new fans. A 60-days-to-pro Fortnite video is simple. A 60-hour Fortnite stream idea is simple. A war simulation in Fortnite is simple. The concepts do not need a ten-minute explanation before someone clicks. That is a real skill, especially in a game where a lot of content can blur together.

The Twitch side gives longtime fans a different kind of access. Instead of only watching the finished video, they can catch quick live check-ins around FNCS or tournaments. It is smaller and rougher, but that can be the point. Not every live channel has to be the main product. Sometimes it is the place where the creator is just there for the people who already care.

Where to follow kebcioo

Twitch is the place to follow kebcioo live, especially if he pops up around Fortnite, FNCS, or tournament moments.

YouTube is the better place to understand the bigger Kebcio world. That is where the Fortnite challenge videos, documentary-style uploads, and higher-view content live.

kebcio.pro is worth checking if you are specifically interested in the Fortnite tools side, including the drop calculator, custom crosshair, Discord link, and map-code unlock flow.

The quick version

kebcioo is Bartek, a Polish Twitch creator also tied to the wider Kebcio Fortnite name. His Twitch channel has been around since 2015, sits around the mid-50,000 follower range, and is mostly quiet right now except for short Fortnite/FNCS appearances.

The stronger public lane is Fortnite: old competitive traces, FNCS-related streams, YouTube videos with major reach, and a tools site built for Fortnite players.

Fans follow because Kebcio is easy to understand if you care about Polish Fortnite. He has the creator name, the game history, the YouTube ideas, and the side projects that make him feel bigger than just one inactive-looking Twitch page.

Streamable is happy to support kebcioo'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 kebcioo, the Polish Twitch and YouTube Fortnite creator also known as Kebcio, with Twitch history, FNCS streams, and Fortnite tools.

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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