Blog
Streamable Creator Spotlight: NateSoju
A creator profile of NateSoju, the Canadian ex-model and TikTok creator turned Twitch and Kick partner known for IRL, Just Chatting, viewer games, and House of Feelings streams.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is NateSoju?
NateSoju is a Canadian Twitch Partner whose public bio says the important part fast: ex model, turned TikToker, turned IRL and variety streamer. His Instagram says the same thing with a little more platform detail, pointing to Twitch, Kick, and a TikTok audience around 600K.
Viewers watch NateSoju because the channel has the kind of personality-first energy that makes sense across platforms. The Instagram side is polished enough to show the model and TikTok background. The Twitch side is looser: Just Chatting, viewer games, song battles, watch parties, late starts, shirtless stream jokes, and a lot of chat-facing titles that sound like he is talking to regulars before the stream even begins.
Public tracker pages checked in early July 2026 put him around 21K Twitch followers. SullyGnome listed 21,187 followers, Partnered status, English language, and an account created in August 2015. TwitchTracker listed Partner status, English language, a 2015 account date, and Twitch Top 0.46%. TwitchMetrics listed 21,194 followers and described him as an ex model turned TikToker turned IRL and variety streamer, currently in hiatus-stream mode.
The quick version is that NateSoju is not trying to be only one thing. He is a social creator, a live streamer, a gaming viewer-customs host, and a guy whose stream titles often read like the group chat got turned into the broadcast title.
From model to TikTok to live
Nate's public bio has a clean creator arc: model first, TikTok after that, then Twitch and Kick. His X bio calls him a Variety and IRL streamer, links Twitch, references the ex-model background, and names his old TikTok handle as `inokiyan` with 600K+.
That path explains the channel better than any single stat page. Modeling teaches presentation. TikTok teaches speed and clipping. Live streaming asks for something different: staying interesting when there is no edit, no retake, and chat can interrupt every thought.
NateSoju's Twitch titles show that live version pretty clearly. StreamRecorder logged titles around `Missed YALL`, `Song Battle Today`, `SMASH OR PASS`, viewer custom games, House of Feelings watch-party research, unboxing a huge package, and IRL clubbing. Some of it is gaming. Some is social. Some is Nate turning a random thought into the reason to go live.
That is the difference between a creator with followers and a creator with a stream. Nate already has the social base. Twitch is where that base gets to sit with him while the bit takes longer to unfold.
The House of Feelings thread
One recent public thread around Nate is House of Feelings. Search results surfaced Instagram posts saying he appeared on the show, with episode clips using his handle. StreamRecorder also logged late-June Twitch titles around House of Feelings, including a watch-party and research stream, plus an earlier `HOUSE OF FEELINGS` and `IRL CLUBBING?` title.
That is exactly the kind of off-stream event that can feed a Twitch channel. A dating show gives fans something to talk about, something to replay, something to tease, and something to watch with the creator afterward. Nate's stream title even framed it that way: he needed to do his research and missed everyone.
Those streams matter because they connect the polished short-form world to the live room. People can see a clip on Instagram, then show up on Twitch to watch Nate react, explain, joke, or just let chat spam questions.
It also gives the channel a different flavor from a plain variety stream. Nate is not only cycling through games. He has social storylines, off-platform appearances, and a chat that can treat those things like shared lore.
The recent Twitch numbers
NateSoju's recent tracker numbers move around depending on the site and update window, so the honest read is a range rather than one fake-perfect number. SullyGnome listed 11 hours streamed over the past 30 days, 1,138 hours watched, 98 average viewers, a 125 peak, four streams, and -22 follower change. TwitchTracker showed 21 hours streamed, 102 average viewers, a 129 peak, and -27 followers gained in its visible panel.
Streams Charts had a different 30-day view in search results, listing 58 hours and 30 minutes streamed, 3,296 hours watched, 57 average viewers, a 143 peak, and 20,632 followers, while another visible Streams Charts snippet showed 19 hours and 20 minutes with a 103 average and 131 peak. TwitchMetrics listed 21,194 followers and said he usually streams IRL.
The exact monthly number is less important than the shape. Nate is a Partnered English-language channel with a long Twitch account history, a 20K+ follower base, and a current live schedule that appears lighter than his older spikes. His own Twitch bio even says he is in hiatus-stream mode.
That makes the recent 30-day stats feel less like a decline story and more like a snapshot of a creator who is active, but not in a heavy grind block right now.
Just Chatting first, games when they fit
StreamRecorder tracked 31 NateSoju streams from May 18 to June 27, 2026, with 50 hours and 11 minutes of airtime across 15 active days. Its top category chips showed Just Chatting with 19 tracked streams, then League of Legends, VALORANT, Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream, Gamble With Your Friends, and Neverness to Everness.
That mix feels very Nate. Just Chatting is the base because the main draw is him and chat. Games come in when they give the room something to do: viewer customs, League, VALORANT, Tomodachi Life characters, or a sponsored stream. The game is usually part of the hang, not a hard reset into esports mode.
The Tomodachi Life streams are a good example. StreamRecorder logged titles about creating viewers in Tomodachi Life and making viewers in the game after Nate got new teeth. That is a very Twitch idea: take chat, turn them into in-game characters, and let the stream become a weird little social sim.
His League and VALORANT titles also lean viewer-facing. They are about viewer custom games and song requests more than ranked ladder grinding. The stream is still about the people in the room.
Clips, YouTube, and socials
NateSoju has a real public audience outside Twitch. Instagram search results listed 28.3K followers and a bio that says ex model, turned TikToker, turned streamer, with Twitch and Kick Partner status and TikTok at 600K. X search results showed around 14K followers and the same variety/IRL streamer positioning.
His YouTube is smaller, but it exists under `@natesoju` with about 3.24K subscribers and 52 videos. The channel description says his name is Nate or NateSoju, and search snippets showed clips around Valorant, Twitch timing, and stream moments rather than a huge separate YouTube show.
TwitchMetrics' clip page gives a useful older snapshot too. Top clips include Just Chatting and VALORANT moments like `What is this`, `the worst feeling ever`, `Clean?`, `cute usernames huh?`, `Nezuko hot af?`, and `Is Las Vegas a country?`. The clip titles are goofy and scattered in the way variety creators usually are.
That is the public picture: Instagram and TikTok built the wider audience, Twitch is the live base, Kick is part of the current streamer identity, and YouTube stores a smaller set of clips.
Why viewers watch NateSoju
Viewers watch NateSoju because he feels like a creator who understands the camera before the stream starts. The model and TikTok background matter there. He knows how to present himself, but Twitch gives fans the less-edited version: late starts, chat jokes, viewer games, watch parties, and random titles that sound like he typed them while already laughing.
He also has the kind of stream format that lets fans enter from different doors. Some people know him from TikTok. Some from Instagram. Some from House of Feelings clips. Some from Just Chatting. Some from League or VALORANT viewer customs. Twitch pulls those groups into one room.
The current hiatus-stream note actually makes the channel feel more specific. Nate is not pretending to be in maximum grind mode every week. When he does go live, the stream leans into missing chat, catching up, playing something with viewers, or turning an off-stream thing into a watch-party topic.
The best version of NateSoju's channel is straightforward: chat knows him, he knows how to keep the camera on him, and the stream can switch from social talk to a game to a show recap without losing the point.
Where to follow NateSoju
The main live channel is Twitch under `natesoju`. His Twitch bio describes him as an ex model turned TikToker turned IRL and variety streamer, currently in hiatus-stream mode, with Kick also listed.
Instagram is the cleanest public page for the model/TikTok-to-streamer side, and X is the easiest place to see the short creator bio in one line. YouTube has a smaller archive of clips and stream-adjacent videos.
For stats, TwitchTracker, SullyGnome, Streams Charts, TwitchMetrics, and StreamRecorder are the useful public pages. The tracker windows disagree a bit, but they all point at the same main identity: English-language Partner, 20K+ Twitch followers, Just Chatting and IRL/variety, with games mixed in when they fit the stream.
The quick version
NateSoju is a Canadian English-language Twitch Partner with around 21K Twitch followers, a public ex-model and TikTok background, Twitch and Kick Partner positioning, and a wider social audience led by TikTok and Instagram.
His Twitch channel is mostly personality-first: Just Chatting, IRL, House of Feelings watch-party energy, viewer custom games, League, VALORANT, Tomodachi Life, song battles, and catching up with chat.
The recent tracker numbers show lighter live hours than older spikes, but the profile is still clear: Nate is a social creator using Twitch as the live room for fans who already know the face and want the longer version.
Streamable is happy to support NateSoju's streams and help keep them running clean so he can stay live without dealing with tech issues.
Follow us on Social Media
Follow along for updates and tips:
Optional: Deep-Dive FAQ
Open only if you still need extra troubleshooting context.
What does this guide help with?
A creator profile of NateSoju, the Canadian ex-model and TikTok creator turned Twitch and Kick partner known for IRL, Just Chatting, viewer games, and House of Feelings streams.
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.
