Blog
Streamable Creator Spotlight: princeleftpluto
A creator profile of princeleftpluto, also known as PrinceOnPluto and Prince Cassell, covering his Twitch channel, Just Chatting streams, IRL streams, YouTube history, Instagram clips, and G.o.G community.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is princeleftpluto?
princeleftpluto is the Twitch side of PrinceOnPluto, the online name tied to Prince Cassell's YouTube, Instagram, X, and reaction-comedy content. On Twitch, the profile line is short: `PRINCEONPLUTO`. On YouTube, the channel points viewers straight back to Twitch under `Princeleftpluto`.
Viewers love watching princeleftpluto because he talks like someone who has actually been online long enough to know what makes a clip move. The streams are not built around perfect production. They are built around him reacting, joking, talking to chat, going live from IRL settings, and keeping the same loud internet personality people already know from PrinceOnPluto videos.
The Twitch channel is not tiny. Public tracker pages checked in July 2026 put princeleftpluto around 11.8K followers, Partner status, and recent average viewership around 100. TwitchTracker listed 41 hours streamed, 100 average viewers, 175 peak viewers, and 416 followers gained in its 30-day snapshot. SullyGnome listed 11,798 followers, 37 hours streamed, 3,928 hours watched, 104 average viewers, 175 peak viewers, and 393 followers gained.
The YouTube side is much bigger. PrinceOnPluto's YouTube about data showed 90K subscribers, 4,761,960 views, 230 videos, and a channel join date of July 26, 2016. That makes the Twitch channel feel less like a random new streamer and more like a creator moving his existing audience into live shows.
The PrinceOnPluto trail
PrinceOnPluto is the older and bigger public trail. The YouTube channel has been around since 2016, and the descriptions on recent uploads push people toward Twitch, Instagram, X, Discord, and a newer gaming channel. The same names repeat everywhere: PrinceOnPluto, Prince Cassell, princeleftpluto, and PrinceCassell or PrinceCassellJR.
That matters because a lot of Twitch discovery starts outside Twitch now. Someone might see an Instagram reel, a YouTube reaction, an old video, a short clip, or a post, then end up on the live channel. princeleftpluto has that path already. He is not trying to build an entire identity from a blank Twitch page.
The YouTube feed also shows the type of creator he is. Recent public RSS entries included reaction videos, horror-game content, lineup and dating-style videos, an Ice Cartel grill unboxing, and Shorts. The descriptions keep sending people back to Twitch and Instagram, which makes the channel feel like part of a bigger creator loop instead of one isolated platform.
There is a strong community name around it too: G.o.G. The YouTube about page links a G.o.G Discord, and an old YouTube community post talks directly to people who want to become creators versus people who like watching content. That is the sort of thing fans remember because it gives the audience a name and a place to gather.
What he streams on Twitch
On Twitch, princeleftpluto is mostly Just Chatting with some IRL. TwitchTracker's game pages and SullyGnome's recent rows both point in that direction. The queue had the channel as stopped when captured, but public trackers showed he had gone live several times in June and early July.
SullyGnome's 30-day table showed eight recent streams. July 2 was Just Chatting for 4.2 hours, with 108 average viewers, 139 peak viewers, 450 hours watched, and 33 followers gained. June 29 was another Just Chatting stream at 5 hours, 105 average, 124 peak, 530.2 hours watched, and 32 followers gained. June 27 was 4.6 hours, 104 average, 121 peak, and 24 followers gained.
The IRL rows stand out because they break up the desk stream. June 15 was a shorter IRL stream at 0.8 hours, 88 average viewers, and 102 peak. June 14 was a longer IRL stream at 7.7 hours, 113 average, 157 peak, 873.9 hours watched, and 45 followers gained. That is the kind of stream where a creator's personality matters more than a game title.
The rest of the visible 30-day table stays steady: June 18 hit 100 average and 175 peak in Just Chatting, June 11 hit 96 average and 114 peak, and June 9 hit 102 average and 120 peak. There is not one giant spike carrying the whole page. It looks like a consistent small-to-mid live room around 100 people.
The current Twitch numbers
princeleftpluto's recent Twitch numbers are healthy for a creator whose largest audience still appears to be outside Twitch. TwitchTracker listed the channel as ranked around #26,171 overall, #12,068 among English channels, and Twitch top 0.42% in its current snapshot. It also lists English language, account creation on August 2, 2019, and Partner status.
TwitchTracker's performance summary showed 41 hours streamed, 100 average viewers, 175 peak viewers, and 416 followers gained. SullyGnome listed 37 hours streamed, 3,928 hours watched, 104 average viewers, 175 peak viewers, 393 followers gained, and 8 streams. The two pages are close enough to tell the same story.
The follower count is also right around 12K. SullyGnome listed 11,798 followers, and TwitchTracker's statistics search result listed 11.6K followers to date. It is not a giant Twitch channel, but the live room is more important than the exact follower number.
The best part of the stats is the follower gain. Gaining roughly 393 to 416 followers in a 30-day window while averaging around 100 viewers suggests people are still discovering him live, not only from old YouTube videos. That is what makes the Twitch channel worth a separate profile instead of only calling him a YouTuber.
Instagram and short-form clips
Instagram is another clear part of the public trail. The `@princeonplutolive` page listed 1,590 followers, 1 following, 143 posts, and a bio pointing people to `@princecasselljr`, Twitch under PRINCELEFTPLUTO, and YouTube under PRINCEONPLUTO.
Search results around the Instagram reels show the same content style as the YouTube channel: reaction clips, gaming clips, horror-game moments, Streamer University jokes, funny captions, and the recurring labels PRINCEONPLUTO, PRINCELEFTPLUTO, and PRINCECASSELLJR. The formatting is loud because that is the brand. It is meant to jump off a feed.
That short-form side is important because it keeps the Twitch channel from depending only on people already browsing Twitch. A reel can bring people back to YouTube. A YouTube description can push people to Twitch. A Twitch stream can turn into another clip. That cycle is how a lot of mid-sized creator channels actually grow now.
princeleftpluto is not presenting himself like a quiet gaming streamer. The public accounts are built around reactions, jokes, dating and lineup videos, horror games, personality-first streams, and the G.o.G community. The Twitch channel is one more place for that same voice to happen live.
Why viewers watch princeleftpluto
Viewers watch princeleftpluto because he already knows how to make a reaction feel personal. A lot of creators can watch a video on stream. Fewer can make the audience feel like they came for the way that specific person talks back to it.
That is the through-line from PrinceOnPluto to Twitch. The YouTube titles are loud. The Instagram captions are loud. The Twitch bio is basically just the name. The live streams are mostly Just Chatting and IRL. Everything points to the same idea: people are there for Prince's delivery, not for one exact game.
The current Twitch numbers fit that too. Around 100 average viewers is a good size for a personality room. Chat can still be part of the stream. The creator can still notice names. The room is active without becoming unreadable. For a creator with 90K YouTube subscribers, that can be a strong live base to keep building from.
The other reason fans stick around is that he does not sound like he is trying to sand down the internet out of his personality. The jokes, titles, posts, and reactions are very much his lane. You either get it or you do not. The people who do get it have a lot of places to follow him.
Where to follow princeleftpluto
Twitch is the main place to watch princeleftpluto live. That is where the Just Chatting streams, IRL rows, and live reactions happen.
YouTube under PrinceOnPluto is the biggest archive, with 90K subscribers, 230 videos, and more than 4.7 million views listed on the public about page. The channel descriptions point people back to Twitch and Instagram.
Instagram is split between `@princeonplutolive` and the linked `@princecasselljr` identity. X is under `@princeonpluto`, and older posts/search results also mention `princeleftpluto`. Fans searching across platforms should expect all of those names to show up.
The quick version
princeleftpluto is the Twitch channel for PrinceOnPluto, also publicly tied to Prince Cassell and the `PRINCEONPLUTO` name across YouTube, Instagram, and X.
Public July 2026 tracker pages showed the Twitch channel around 11.8K followers, Partner status, English language, account creation on August 2, 2019, and recent average viewership around 100.
His larger YouTube channel listed 90K subscribers, 4,761,960 views, 230 videos, and a July 26, 2016 join date. The content trail points to reactions, gaming, IRL, short-form clips, and the G.o.G community.
Streamable is happy to support princeleftpluto'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 princeleftpluto, also known as PrinceOnPluto and Prince Cassell, covering his Twitch channel, Just Chatting streams, IRL streams, YouTube history, Instagram clips, and G.o.G community.
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.
