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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Nisqyy

A creator profile of Nisqyy, the French-language Twitch channel for League of Legends pro and ZYB figure Nisqy, covering his esports history, current streams, Twitch numbers, and fan draw.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightnisqyynisqytwitchleague of legendszyb

Who is Nisqyy?

Nisqyy is the Twitch channel for Nisqy, the Belgian League of Legends name most fans know from years of pro play, French-language streams, and the newer ZYB project. Public esports pages list his real name as Yasin Dincer, and Twitch tracker pages tie the `nisqyy` channel to French language, Partner status, and a March 6, 2015 creation date.

Viewers love watching Nisqyy because he is not a random streamer pretending to understand high-level League. He has actually lived the pro version of the game. That changes how the stream feels. When he talks about a match, a player, a draft, a scrim block, or a team problem, the chat knows it is coming from someone who has been on stage, in team houses, in roster drama, and around serious League for a long time.

The Twitch channel is big on its own. Public tracker pages checked in July 2026 put Nisqyy around 373K followers. TwitchTracker listed him at rank #783 overall and #60 among French channels in its snapshot, with 292 hours streamed, 1,263 average viewers, 5,162 peak viewers, and 1,410 current active subs. TwitchMetrics listed 373,282 followers. Streams Charts listed 373,309 followers.

The short bio also says a lot. TwitchTracker and TwitchMetrics both show the French profile line calling him `CEO DE ZYB` and a very strong midlaner. That is basically the whole current identity in one line: League player, French-speaking streamer, ZYB face, still joking through the confidence.

The League name behind the stream

Nisqy was already known before the Twitch channel became a daily hangout. Leaguepedia lists him as Yasin `Nisqy` Dincer, a Belgian and Turkish League of Legends figure currently connected to ZYB Esport. Liquipedia describes him as a Belgian/Turkish coach, mid, and support working with ZYB as coach.

His career path reads like someone who has been around every serious corner of Western League. Leaguepedia's team history starts in 2015 and runs through teams like PunchLine, InFamouS, Melty, Fnatic Academy, EnVy, Splyce, Cloud9, Fnatic, MAD Lions, SK Gaming, Karmine Corp, Vitality, and ZYB. Fans may argue about their favorite era, but nobody has to ask whether he has a real resume.

That history is also why the French-speaking audience is so locked in. Leaguepedia notes his connection to Kameto and says he casted Karmine Corp games on Kameto's Twitch channel. Sheep Esports also described his strong ties with KC and Kameto when writing about his move to Karmine Corp as a substitute midlaner. For French League fans, that is not background trivia. That is part of why people click.

Nisqy has the rare mix of pro credibility and stream comfort. Some retired or active pros feel stiff on camera because they are used to interviews, not chat. Nisqy is different. He can talk like a player, complain like a player, joke like a streamer, and still hold the room through a long stream. That is why the channel can be about League without only being a League classroom.

ZYB is part of the story now

ZYB is not a small side note in the current Nisqyy story. Streams Charts lists ZYB under his esports activity, and its profile page says his current League of Legends team is ZYB. Leaguepedia lists him as coach for ZYB Esport, while the ZYB team page says Nisqy changed from mid to coach when Adam and SAKEN joined.

Sheep Esports reported the same direction in June 2026, writing that ZYB would rebuild around arrivals like Adam and SAKEN while Nisqy moved into a coaching role. That is a clean bridge between his pro past and his live channel now: the stream is not just a retired player talking about old games. It is attached to the current French League scene.

That gives viewers more to watch than ranked games. They can follow the team project, roster updates, match reactions, Karmine Life reactions, Korea talk, League commentary, and the personal side of watching someone run through all of this in public. TwitchMetrics showed recent titles like `REACT KARMINE LIFE`, `DEMAIN COREE`, and `ouaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaais`, with Grand Theft Auto V, Just Chatting, League of Legends, and other categories mixed in.

The ZYB angle also makes the channel feel more like a club room than a solo stream. Chat is not only there for Nisqy as a player. They are there for the team, the friends around him, the French League jokes, the KC overlap, and the sense that the stream might suddenly become the place where a roster update or reaction actually happens first.

What he streams

Nisqyy is a League person, but the channel is not only League of Legends. TwitchMetrics said he usually streams Grand Theft Auto V. SullyGnome's current summary said his most streamed category over its checked 30-day window was World of Warcraft for 155 hours, with ten other categories also appearing. TwitchMetrics visible stream rows showed GTA V, Just Chatting, League of Legends, and Underchoice in late June.

That mix is part of why the channel works as a fan room. A pro-only stream can get narrow fast. Nisqyy can still be the League guy while doing GTA V, Just Chatting, reactions, long side quests, Korea talk, or whatever else fits the day. The title does not have to be perfect because viewers are mainly there to hear him talk and react.

TwitchMetrics listed a June 25 stream titled `REACT KARMINE LIFE | !maillot !hyperx !recap`, streamed for eight hours, mostly in Grand Theft Auto V, with 877 average viewers and 1,277 peak. The same day, another stream titled `DEMAIN COREE | !maillot !hyperx !recap` ran for four hours in Just Chatting with 984 average and 1,230 peak.

The June 24 row is the best example of the variety. TwitchMetrics listed `ouaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaais | !maillot !hyperx !recap` at 12 hours, with eight hours of Grand Theft Auto V, two hours of Just Chatting, one hour of League of Legends, one hour of Underchoice, 1,016 average viewers, and 2,572 peak. That is a real streamer day, not a tidy content plan.

The current Twitch numbers

Nisqyy's current numbers are big, but the trackers disagree more than usual because they were caught in different windows. TwitchTracker's snapshot showed 292 hours streamed, 1,263 average viewers, 5,162 peak viewers, and -260 followers gained. It also listed 1,410 current active subs, 637 gifted active subs, and 3,231 all-time high active subs.

TwitchMetrics listed 223 hours streamed, 247,580 hours watched, 1,109 average viewers, 5,087 peak viewers, and 373,282 followers in the last 30 days. Its ranking section put him at #16 for Grand Theft Auto V, #43 among French-language channels, and #7 among French Grand Theft Auto V channels.

SullyGnome was much louder in the window it exposed. It listed 278 hours streamed, 2,151 average viewers, 20,573 peak viewers, 599,185 hours watched, and 39 streams in the past 30 days. The same page said Nisqyy has been watched for more than 2.4 million hours so far in 2026, with an average of 2,736 viewers and a peak of 30,278.

Streams Charts landed in between on some stats and lower on peak for its own 30-day view: 273 hours and 20 minutes streamed, 317,345 hours watched, 1,161 average viewers, 5,151 peak viewers, 1,680,217 live views, 373,309 followers, and Partner status. Even if you take the lowest versions, Nisqyy is still a major French-language Twitch channel.

The big stream rows

SullyGnome's visible rows explain why some of the recent stats got so high. On June 19, it listed a 13.5-hour stream with 5,095 average viewers, 20,573 peak viewers, 68,782.5 hours watched, and 224 followers gained. On June 17, it listed 10.6 hours with 5,770 average, 17,890 peak, 60,873.5 hours watched, and 485 followers gained.

Those rows are way above the normal four-digit baseline shown on other tracker pages. They also fit the way a League personality channel spikes: one stream can become a watch party, a team discussion, a big reaction, or a long community day, and suddenly the audience is much bigger than a regular GTA or Just Chatting session.

SullyGnome also had long-but-smaller rows: June 18 at 18.1 hours, 1,676 average, 3,072 peak, and 30,391.5 hours watched; June 14 at 19.2 hours, 1,868 average, 3,561 peak, and 35,959 hours watched; June 16 at 6.2 hours, 1,196 average, and 1,763 peak; June 20 at 5.6 hours, 1,695 average, and 2,310 peak.

The stream length matters. Nisqyy is not just dropping in for two-hour shows. These are long broadcasts, sometimes ten-plus hours, sometimes almost twenty. That is exactly the kind of schedule that makes chat feel like a daily place instead of an occasional event.

Why viewers watch Nisqyy

Viewers watch Nisqyy because he has the rare version of credibility that does not feel boring. He can talk high-level League, but he can also yell through GTA, react to Karmine Life, joke in French, pull up a stream title that looks like a group chat message, and keep going for hours.

The French-language audience also gets a lot of context from him that would be hard to fake. ZYB, KC, Kameto, LFL, old LEC history, roster moves, Korea trips, pro friends, scrims, and ranked stories all sit around the stream. A viewer who follows French League does not need a giant intro. They click and already know why the room is reacting.

He also has the right amount of mess for Twitch. The titles are not corporate. The schedule is heavy. The game mix is not neatly packaged. The channel can go from serious League talk to GTA V to Just Chatting without acting like every category change needs a rebrand. That is what makes it feel like a real streamer channel and not just an esports resume with a camera.

Nisqyy's biggest strength is that fans can watch him as Nisqy the pro, Nisqy the ZYB person, Nisqy the French Twitch personality, or just Nisqy the guy who is live again and talking. All of those versions make sense together.

Where to follow Nisqyy

Twitch is the main place to watch Nisqyy live. The channel is under `nisqyy`, and public pages list it as a French-language Twitch Partner channel with hundreds of thousands of followers.

X is under `@Nisqy`, where the public profile points people toward the Twitch channel and the League side of his identity. Instagram search results point to `@nisqylol`, with a public bio around being a streamer and the same Nisqy identity.

For the esports background, Leaguepedia and Liquipedia are the cleanest starting points. For current stream stats, TwitchTracker, TwitchMetrics, SullyGnome, and Streams Charts are the main public tracker pages.

The quick version

Nisqyy is the Twitch channel for Nisqy, the Belgian/Turkish League of Legends figure publicly listed as Yasin Dincer, with a long pro career and a current ZYB role.

Public July 2026 tracker pages showed around 373K Twitch followers, French language, Partner status, account creation on March 6, 2015, and recent average viewership ranging from about 1,100 to 2,151 depending on the tracker window.

The channel is not only League. Recent public rows showed Grand Theft Auto V, Just Chatting, League of Legends, Underchoice, World of Warcraft, Karmine Life reactions, Korea talk, and long streams that can run well past ten hours.

Streamable is happy to support Nisqyy'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 Nisqyy, the French-language Twitch channel for League of Legends pro and ZYB figure Nisqy, covering his esports history, current streams, Twitch numbers, and fan draw.

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.

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