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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Mews
A public creator profile of Mews, the Twitch Partner and short-form creator known for viewer games, VALORANT, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Instagram, fitness, dance, Pokemon, and prank videos.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is Mews?
Mews is a Twitch Partner and short-form creator fans know from viewer games, VALORANT streams, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Instagram, fitness clips, dance, Pokemon, rock climbing, and prank-style videos that look built to move fast on every feed. The Twitch bio is simple and very direct: viewer games every day, turn on notifications, and thanks for supporting.
Public Twitch profile data checked on July 4, 2026 showed Mews with more than 822,000 Twitch followers, Partner status, and a Twitch account created on August 14, 2013. TwitchTracker lists the channel as English and Partner. That is a long time to be around Twitch. Mews is not a creator who appeared out of nowhere with one short-video run.
The current public profile is split in an interesting way. Twitch still matters, and the channel still has a huge follower base. But the newer daily visibility seems to come from short-form comedy and challenge videos. Instagram search results show more than 500,000 followers. YouTube public metadata showed about 373,000 subscribers. Public X search snippets describe Mews as having 3 million on TikTok and 500,000 on Instagram, with Pokemon, fitness, dance, and rock climbing in the mix.
The Twitch side
Mews has one of the older Twitch accounts in this backfill. The public account date goes back to 2013, and TwitchTracker shows the channel in the top slice of English Twitch channels by its public ranking. The channel has also had real sub history, with TwitchTracker listing thousands of all-time high active subs.
Recent public Twitch data points more toward VALORANT than the older all-purpose viewer-games bio. TwitchMetrics listed recent July and late-June 2026 streams in VALORANT, including titles like naked and afraid 400 subs, number 1 internet larper 300 subs, and Japan vs Sweden drinking and ripping. The recent streams were not huge compared with the follower count, but they were still live rooms with around 100 to 130 average viewers.
Streams Charts showed a similar recent window, with 11 hours and 35 minutes streamed, 134 average viewers, a 175 peak, and recent streams around a birthday subathon, a new content house, Vegas and Florida travel, and subscriber goals. That sounds like a creator who uses Twitch as a home base for regulars while the bigger public discovery is happening somewhere else.
That is not a bad thing. A lot of creators now have one platform where the audience discovers them and another where the strongest fans hang out longer. For Mews, Twitch carries years of history, old clips, VALORANT, Just Chatting, Fortnite, viewer games, and the direct live relationship. TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram are the wider front door.
Why viewers know the name
Fans love watching Mews because the content is not stuck in one box. The Twitch profile says viewer games. TwitchMetrics says recent VALORANT. Old public clips point to Fortnite and Just Chatting. Social profiles point to Pokemon, fitness, dance, rock climbing, and prank videos. That sounds scattered until you actually look at the pattern: Mews is built around whatever can turn into a quick moment.
The old Twitch clips show that history clearly. TwitchMetrics lists popular clips from Fortnite, Just Chatting, and VALORANT, including friendzone jokes and old Fortnite moments. The exact games changed, but the reason clips moved was the same: something funny or awkward happened and viewers wanted to replay it.
The current short-form style keeps that same instinct but pushes it into faster formats. Recent TikTok posts from late June and early July 2026 were built around lightsaber bits, boxing/MMA challenges, girlfriend jokes, prank tags, bottle kicks, and fitness-coach setups. Recent YouTube Shorts used almost the same rhythm: cheeseburger bits, Star Wars, bottle kicks, Target runs, cheese pranks, and girlfriend challenge videos.
That is why the channel can move between Twitch and short-form without feeling like a total reset. Mews is not only asking people to watch a full game. Mews is giving people a quick setup, a reaction, a physical bit, or a joke they understand in two seconds.
The short-form run
Mews' TikTok and YouTube Shorts feeds are very active. Public TikTok data checked on July 4, 2026 showed recent videos posted daily or close to daily, with titles around lightsaber duels, boxing, MMA, bottle kicks, prank setups, and funny girlfriend clips. The public YouTube RSS feed showed the same kind of constant short uploads in late June and early July.
The YouTube channel is big enough to matter on its own. Public metadata showed about 373,000 subscribers, and the RSS feed had new shorts with titles like Next level cheeseburger, He actually started crying, The best bottle kick, Bumped into the wrong girl, Never trust your friend, World's luckiest Target run, and Filling his room with cheese. That feed is not trying to be a traditional streamer archive. It is a short-video machine.
Instagram adds another huge surface. The public profile showed about 527,000 followers and more than 1,700 posts. Search results describe the profile as Dallas-based, with TikTok, content crew, and business info in the bio. That tells you a lot about how Mews is currently presenting online: not just as a Twitch gamer, but as a social creator with multiple recurring video lanes.
The best part is that a lot of the videos are physical. Boxing, MMA, rock climbing, dancing, running around stores, food bits, and prank setups give the short-form pages movement. A new viewer can get the joke fast even if they have never seen a Mews Twitch stream.
The gaming roots
Mews still reads like a gaming creator even with all the short-form growth. Twitch is the obvious reason, but it is not the only one. The X search result puts Pokemon right next to fitness, dance, and rock climbing. The Twitch bio talks about viewer games. TwitchMetrics says recent streams are usually VALORANT. The old public Instagram post search result even points to Fortnite trickshots from 2021.
That mix is what makes Mews different from a pure prank-page account. The short videos can stand alone, but there is still a gamer thread underneath them. A viewer might find Mews from a lightsaber or cheese prank, then realize the same creator has a Twitch account with years of history and a huge follower count.
For fans, that gives the account more ways to stick. Some people only want the fast videos. Some want Twitch. Some want Pokemon and collecting. Some want fitness and dance. Some want the girlfriend/prank bits. Mews does not have to make all of those audiences care about everything. The point is that all of them can find the same creator from a different door.
The viewer-games line in the Twitch bio still matters too. Even if current public logs show more VALORANT, that old promise tells fans what the live room is supposed to feel like: viewers are part of the stream, not just watching from the outside.
Where to follow Mews
The main live channel is Twitch. That is where Mews streams VALORANT, viewer games, Just Chatting, and whatever the live room turns into.
TikTok and YouTube are the fastest way to understand the current public style. Both feeds are built around short, physical, joke-first videos: challenges, pranks, fitness bits, girlfriend clips, food, Target runs, and quick reactions.
Instagram is the bigger public profile for photos and Reels, and LinkMe pulls the social links together. X is useful for the public creator bio and the Pokemon, fitness, dance, and rock-climbing tags around the account.
The quick version
Mews is a long-running Twitch Partner with a 2013 account, more than 822,000 Twitch followers, and a live history around viewer games, VALORANT, Just Chatting, Fortnite, and clips.
The current public story is bigger than Twitch. Mews has a large Instagram following, a major YouTube Shorts channel, a huge TikTok presence, and a short-form style built around pranks, challenges, physical comedy, fitness, dance, Pokemon, and gaming culture.
That is why Mews is interesting in this backfill. The Twitch roots are real, but the current reach comes from being easy to discover in short bursts and still having a live channel for people who want to stay longer.
Streamable is happy to support Mews' streams and help keep them running clean so the channel can stay live without dealing with tech issues.
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What does this guide help with?
A public creator profile of Mews, the Twitch Partner and short-form creator known for viewer games, VALORANT, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Instagram, fitness, dance, Pokemon, and prank videos.
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.
