Blog
Streamable Creator Spotlight: nickwhite
A creator profile of nickwhite, the Kick IRL streamer and coding YouTuber with a 56K-plus Kick channel, long live hours, and a big YouTube history.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is nickwhite?
nickwhite is the Kick handle for Nick White, a creator who has one of the stranger and more interesting paths into IRL streaming. Public pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed the Kick channel around 56K followers, while KickBot showed 56,688 followers and Streams Charts listed the channel in the same range.
Fans who know him from Kick see the long live streams first: IRL, Just Chatting, casual hangouts, gaming detours, chat jokes, Discord links, social links, and the sort of titles that feel like someone opened the camera and let the day happen. Fans who know him from YouTube remember a different Nick White: the coding creator with hundreds of programming and interview-prep videos.
That split is what makes the channel easy to remember. The public YouTube page under `NickWhite` still says Nick makes entertaining and educational content. Developer Educators listed the channel around 409K subscribers, 385 videos, and nearly 30 million total views. Instagram under `nickwwhite` ties the two versions together in one short bio: coding videos on YouTube and IRL livestreams on Kick.
So nickwhite is not just another Kick name with a recent IRL run. He is a creator who moved from code lessons and internet education into a live room where viewers watch him walk, talk, react, play games, and get pulled into whatever chat is amplifying that day.
The Kick room is active right now
The clearest current story is Kick. The public Kick page showed `nickwhite` live in Just Chatting with IRL, chill, and gaming tags on July 5, 2026, and the same page showed 56.7K followers. That matters because this is not an old creator page sitting untouched. The live side is active.
Streams Charts showed a heavy recent schedule for the Kick channel: more than 237 hours streamed in the last 30 days, around 1,616 average viewers, and a recent peak above 15,000 viewers. The same page listed his all-time Kick peak at 84,484 viewers on December 16, 2025 and described the channel as usually streaming IRL, Just Chatting, and The Last of Us.
Those numbers explain why the channel feels larger than a normal mid-sized profile. A lot of creators can hit a decent follower count. Far fewer can sit live for that many hours and keep a room active enough that clips, chat references, and side jokes keep building around them.
The public Kick about area also points fans toward Discord, Instagram, Twitter/X, YouTube, and other public links. That makes the channel feel very live-first: not a clean portfolio page, but a hub for people who want to watch, talk, clip, and follow the conversation around the stream.
The YouTube past still matters
Before a lot of viewers knew him as an IRL streamer, Nick White was already known to programmers. His YouTube channel built a large audience around coding problems, software interviews, and educational programming content. The public YouTube page describes the channel as entertaining and educational, and third-party channel trackers still put it above 400K subscribers.
That background changes how the Kick stream reads. A lot of IRL creators arrive from entertainment, gaming, or prank clips. Nick arrived with a whole other internet identity attached: software engineer, educator, coding channel, interview-prep guy, and then a streamer willing to sit in a live room for hours.
Instagram keeps that transition very plain. The `nickwwhite` profile shows around 49K followers and says `Coding Videos @youtube | IRL Livestreams @kickstreaming`. That is probably the cleanest public summary of his current creator life. It does not try to make the jump sound smoother than it is. It just names both halves.
For fans, that contrast is part of the appeal. Someone can find him from a coding video, then end up watching a late-night Kick stream. Someone else can find him through a Kick clip and later realize he has a big older library of programming videos. Either way, the public trail does not feel manufactured. It feels like a creator who changed format in public.
What the stream feels like now
nickwhite's current Kick stream looks less like a packaged show and more like a long-running live hangout. The categories and public titles move between IRL, Just Chatting, casual gaming, and whatever is happening that day. One Kick video page showed recent VOD context around `Wednesday Livestream | Late Night Drinks & Chilling`, while the main page showed a live title of `Someone got me sick` on July 5, 2026.
That kind of title tells fans what to expect. It is not an episode title with a neat premise. It is more like the creator is already mid-conversation and chat is invited to come sit down. The room can move from walking around to talking to playing something to reacting to whatever chat pushes next.
Streams Charts also listed The Last of Us Part II: Remastered as a recent category, which is useful because it shows the channel is not only street IRL. There is gaming in the mix too. The stream can be a couch stream, a game stream, a hangout stream, or an outdoor stream without changing the identity too much.
The common thread is Nick himself. The channel is easiest to understand when viewers are there for the person, not a single category. Coding viewers, Kick regulars, Just Chatting watchers, and people who only catch clips can all read the same thing: this is a creator comfortable being watched for a long time.
Why fans watch
Viewers keep showing up for nickwhite because the stream has a distinct mix that is hard to copy. He is a former coding YouTube mainstay with a Kick room that now feels built around long hours, chat pressure, random turns, and the looseness of live internet attention.
That is not the same appeal as a polished tech channel. The YouTube library gives him history, but the Kick room gives him immediacy. Fans can see what he is doing today, not only what tutorial he posted years ago. If he is walking around, gaming, talking, or just reacting to chat, the stream still has the same center.
The follower count helps make the room feel busy, but the airtime is the real clue. More than 200 hours in a month is a lot of time to be available to viewers. It gives regulars enough chances to form running jokes and gives casual viewers plenty of openings to catch the stream live.
Nick also has an easy public trail to follow. Kick is the current live home. YouTube explains the older creator identity. Instagram ties both together. Streams Charts and KickBot show that the Kick audience is not imaginary. For fans, those pieces make the channel easier to trust as a real live room, not just a one-off clip account.
Where to follow nickwhite
The main live page is Kick under `nickwhite`. That is where the current follower count clears 56K and where the recent IRL, Just Chatting, and gaming streams show up.
KickBot is the cleanest public follower-count source from this check, showing 56,688 followers and linking straight back to the Kick channel. Streams Charts adds the deeper live stats: recent hours, average viewers, peak viewers, categories, and Partner listing.
Instagram under `nickwwhite` is the simplest social profile if you want the short version of Nick's creator identity. It points to coding videos on YouTube and IRL livestreams on Kick without making fans dig through older accounts.
YouTube under `NickWhite` is still worth knowing because it explains why a lot of people first recognized the name. The coding channel has hundreds of videos and a big education audience, even if the current live energy is happening on Kick.
The quick version
nickwhite is a Kick IRL and Just Chatting creator with more than 56K public Kick followers, a very active recent live schedule, and an older YouTube history as a coding educator with a 400K-plus subscriber channel.
Public pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed the Kick channel live, KickBot at 56,688 followers, Streams Charts around the same follower range, and recent Kick stats above 200 streamed hours in the last 30 days.
Fans watch because the channel combines two internet lives in one place: the programming YouTuber people remember and the Kick streamer people can watch in real time for long, loose, chat-heavy sessions.
Streamable is happy to support nickwhite'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 nickwhite, the Kick IRL streamer and coding YouTuber with a 56K-plus Kick channel, long live hours, and a big YouTube history.
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.
