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Streamable Creator Spotlight: STAMSITE

A creator profile of STAMSITE, the Swedish YouTuber and Twitch Partner known for Minecraft, 90gQ, Stamsite Extra, Super Mario Maker 2, Party Bots, and cozy variety streams.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightstamsitetwitchyoutubeswedishminecraft

Who is STAMSITE?

STAMSITE is the online name of Swedish creator Marcus Nyman, a long-running YouTuber and Twitch Partner whose channel history goes all the way back to the early Swedish Minecraft era. TwitchTracker lists the Twitch channel as Swedish-language, Partner status, created June 6, 2011, and carrying a bio where Marcus introduces himself as a let's player who usually plays calmer games like Minecraft instead of FPS games.

Viewers love watching STAMSITE because his channel feels like a creator who has been around long enough to have actual history with his audience. This is not someone who appeared for one viral stream. The name ties into Swedish Minecraft, 90gQ, Stamsite Extra, Super Mario Maker 2 competitions, variety games, and a Twitch room where longtime viewers already know the pace.

Wikipedia lists him as Johan Marcus Nyman, born June 23, 1992 in Kungälv, Sweden, and says his main YouTube channel was created on September 22, 2007. Famous Birthdays calls him a YouTuber and gamer who rose to fame playing Minecraft on his main channel, and notes that he also has a second channel called Stamsite Extra for other game videos, vlogs, and Twitch stream recaps.

The short version: STAMSITE is one of those creators whose Twitch makes more sense when you know the YouTube history. Twitch is the live room. YouTube is the long archive. 90gQ is part of the old Minecraft identity. Stamsite Extra is where a lot of side-series energy lives. The whole thing feels very Swedish, very gaming-first, and very built for people who have watched him for years.

The Minecraft and 90gQ roots

STAMSITE's name is tied tightly to Swedish Minecraft. Wikipedia says he was inspired to start making YouTube videos after watching an English-language Minecraft Let's Play, and that he began his own series on the private Minecraft server `90gQ` in December 2010. It also says the 90gQ server was founded by Marcus and friends around October 2010 and had been the basis for more than 1,000 YouTube videos by 2026.

Wikitubia gives the same basic shape: Marcus `Marre` Nyman, better known as STAMSITE, is a Swedish gaming YouTuber known mostly for Minecraft and Reddit videos, including content around the Minecraft server 90g. The page also lists his main channel as a 2007 YouTube account and STAMSITE Extra as a 2011 side channel.

That history matters because a lot of streaming profiles only explain what happened in the last 30 days. STAMSITE is different. The current Twitch channel is part of a creator identity that has lived through old Minecraft YouTube, Swedish gaming YouTube, server series, extra-channel uploads, tech videos, and live streams.

If you are new to him, that is probably the best way to read the whole thing. STAMSITE is not just `a Swedish Twitch streamer who plays Minecraft sometimes`. He is a Swedish gaming creator whose Twitch channel grew out of a much older YouTube world.

What he streams

STAMSITE's Twitch is Swedish-language and variety-heavy. TwitchTracker's games page lists Minecraft at the top of the stream-time distribution, with Party Bots, Golf It!, Core Keeper, Just Chatting, Variety, Creative, Teardown, PUBG, Super Mario Maker 2, ROBLOX, Stardew Valley, Scrap Mechanic, Jackbox, Fall Guys, and many more games behind it.

That long game list fits his channel bio. He says he is usually playing calmer games like Minecraft instead of FPS games, and the TwitchTracker category list backs that up. A lot of the games are cozy, creative, party-style, puzzle-ish, builder-ish, or community-friendly. Even when the list includes bigger games, the overall shape is not a hardcore esports profile.

Super Mario Maker 2 is a big part of the public trail too. Search results around STAMSITE show a lot of `Super Mario Maker 2 tävling` uploads on STAMSITE Extra, with numbered episodes going deep into the hundreds. The back catalog has that old YouTube-series feeling: same format, same audience expectation, and a lot of viewers who know exactly why they clicked.

Streams Charts lists STAMSITE's usual Twitch categories as Minecraft, Party Bots, and Just Chatting. TwitchTracker shows he was live at capture, and Streams Charts says his last 30-day Twitch activity included 13 hours and 25 minutes streamed, 137 average viewers, and a 179 peak. So the current live side is smaller than the old YouTube archive, but it is still active and recognizable.

The Twitch numbers

STAMSITE is clearly over the backfill threshold. Streams Charts lists 90,122 Twitch followers, 39 new followers in the last 30 days, Partner status, Sweden as the country, Swedish language, and no Twitch bans. Famous Birthdays also says his Twitch stream has earned over 90,000 followers.

TwitchTracker's overview gives the channel a rank around #23,640, #54 among Swedish channels, and Twitch Top 0.38%. It also lists 14 hours streamed, 133 average viewers, 195 peak viewers, and 53 followers gained for its selected recent window. Streams Charts is close on the viewership side, with 13 hours and 25 minutes streamed, 1,838 hours watched, 137 average viewers, 179 peak viewers, and 12,243 live views.

Those numbers are not the whole STAMSITE story, and they are not supposed to be. His public profile is more about years of YouTube and Swedish gaming history than about one month of Twitch volume. Still, the live stats show that the channel is not just an old archive. People are still showing up.

STAMSITE also has an old Twitch account by streaming standards. TwitchTracker and Streams Charts both list June 6, 2011 as the Twitch channel creation date. That puts the account in the same long-running category as the YouTube side: not new, not random, and not built around one short trend.

YouTube is the main archive

STAMSITE's YouTube side is the biggest part of the name. Swedish Wikipedia lists the main channel at 358,000 total subscribers and 311 million total views as of February 15, 2026. It also says the main channel was created in September 2007 and that Marcus has been active since 2010.

The YouTube about result links to merch, X, Instagram, Twitch, and the 90gQ website. Wikitubia lists the main STAMSITE channel as having 4.5K+ videos, STAMSITE Extra as having 1K+ videos, and STAMSITE Tech as a separate technology channel. Famous Birthdays also calls out Stamsite Extra as the second channel for other game videos, vlogs, and Twitch stream recaps.

That is why STAMSITE's Twitch profile should not be judged like a brand-new livestreamer. A lot of the audience probably knows him from YouTube first. They might have watched Minecraft, 90gQ, Reddit videos, Super Mario Maker 2 competitions, or other series before they ever clicked a Twitch notification.

The side-channel structure also gives fans different doors into the same creator. Main channel for the big archive, Extra for other games and recaps, Tech for tech, Twitch for live, Instagram and X for updates, and 90gQ as the old Minecraft world that still gives the name weight.

Party Bots and creator projects

One detail that makes STAMSITE stand out is Party Bots. Swedish Wikipedia says that on May 26, 2023, Stamsite and Maxxbox released their first game on Steam, Party Bots, a multiplayer game where players compete in minigames and collect points to unlock cosmetics.

That connects directly back to the Twitch side because Streams Charts lists Party Bots as one of STAMSITE's usual categories, and TwitchTracker lists Party Bots high in his game history. It is not just a random category he tried once. It is a creator project that also became part of his live content.

That kind of crossover is very STAMSITE: YouTube creator, Minecraft-server history, side channels, merch, community games, and then Twitch streams around the same world. The creator is not only reacting to games other people made. He has also made something that sits inside the community.

For fans, that gives the stream a different texture. When STAMSITE plays Party Bots, it is not the same as a sponsored one-off game night. It is connected to his own creator history, his Swedish audience, and the kind of community-first games he has always leaned toward.

Why viewers watch STAMSITE

Viewers watch STAMSITE because he has the rare kind of creator history that makes a stream feel familiar before it even starts. The audience is not only coming for one category. They are coming for Marcus, the Swedish tone, the Minecraft history, the 90gQ references, the calmer game choices, and the feeling that the channel has been part of their internet for a long time.

The stream also has a softer pace than a lot of live gaming. His own Twitch bio says he usually plays calmer games like Minecraft instead of FPS games, and the category list backs that up. That does not mean nothing happens. It means the channel is more about long-running series, community games, creative worlds, and Swedish commentary than about nonstop ladder anxiety.

STAMSITE also gives fans a lot of ways to stay connected. If they miss a Twitch stream, there is YouTube. If they want side content, there is Stamsite Extra. If they want the older identity, there is 90gQ. If they want current updates, there is Instagram or X. That makes the whole creator setup feel durable.

That is the appeal. STAMSITE is not trying to look like the newest creator on the platform. The reason people care is that he has been building the same world for years, and the live channel is another place where that world keeps moving.

Where to follow STAMSITE

Twitch is `stamsite`, and that is where the live streams happen. The channel is Swedish-language, Partner status, and centered around Minecraft, Party Bots, Just Chatting, Super Mario Maker 2, and variety games.

YouTube is `@STAMSITE`, with Stamsite Extra and STAMSITE Tech as important side channels. Instagram is `@stamsites`, X is `@STAMSITEs`, and the 90gQ website is part of the older Minecraft world.

For public stats, TwitchTracker and Streams Charts are the easiest pages to read. For the broader bio, Famous Birthdays, Wikitubia, Swedish Wikipedia, YouTube, and the 90gQ/Party Bots links explain why STAMSITE is bigger than just one month of Twitch data.

The quick version

STAMSITE is Marcus Nyman, a Swedish YouTuber and Twitch Partner known for Minecraft, 90gQ, Stamsite Extra, Super Mario Maker 2 competitions, Party Bots, and calmer variety gaming.

His Twitch channel was created in June 2011, has around 90K followers, ranks inside the top Swedish-channel group on TwitchTracker, and still pulls a steady Swedish live audience.

His larger creator story is YouTube-first: Swedish Wikipedia lists 358K total YouTube subscribers and 311 million total views as of February 15, 2026, with the main channel dating back to September 2007.

Streamable is happy to support STAMSITE's streams and help keep them running clean so he can stay live without dealing with tech issues.

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Optional: Deep-Dive FAQ

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What does this guide help with?

A creator profile of STAMSITE, the Swedish YouTuber and Twitch Partner known for Minecraft, 90gQ, Stamsite Extra, Super Mario Maker 2, Party Bots, and cozy variety 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.

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