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Streamable Creator Spotlight: stefkicha1

A creator profile of stefkicha1, the Bulgarian Twitch Partner known for Just Chatting, League of Legends, long streams, Korea-trip titles, clips, and a loyal Bulgarian audience.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightstefkicha1twitchbulgarianleague of legendsjust chatting

Who is stefkicha1?

stefkicha1 is a Bulgarian Twitch Partner whose channel sits between Just Chatting, League of Legends, travel-life streams, and the kind of local internet humor that does not really translate cleanly if you are outside the audience. TwitchTracker lists the channel as Bulgarian-language, Partner status, created on December 7, 2020, ranked #4 among Bulgarian channels, and inside Twitch's top 0.14% at capture.

Viewers love watching stefkicha1 because the stream feels like a Bulgarian chat room that already knows him, not a creator trying to explain himself to everyone. The titles are loud, sometimes chaotic, often in Bulgarian, and usually specific enough that regulars know exactly what kind of stream they are getting before they click.

The channel bio is also very direct: `А ВЕ Я СЕ ЧУВСТВАЙТЕ БЕ`. That tone shows up everywhere else too. The YouTube channel is just `Stefkicha`, the Instagram account is `@stefkicha`, the TikTok link is `@stefkicha1`, and the clips around him are mostly Bulgarian viewers sharing funny or wild bits from stream.

The clean way to understand stefkicha1 is this: he is a regional Twitch creator with a real local base. The content is not built to sound universal. It is built for Bulgarian viewers who understand the jokes, the slang, the game queue, the Korea-trip arc, the League grind, and the streamer himself.

The Bulgarian Twitch base

stefkicha1's biggest context is language. TwitchTracker ranks him as the #4 Bulgarian channel in its current overview. TwitchMetrics also ranks him #4 among Bulgarian channels and #1 among Bulgarian Just Chatting channels for its 30-day window. TwitchTracker's Bulgarian viewership page showed him near the top of Bulgarian-language streamers by average viewers.

That matters because Bulgarian Twitch is a much smaller room than English Twitch, Spanish Twitch, or Portuguese Twitch. A creator can be a serious name in the local scene without having a giant English-language footprint. For stefkicha1, the point is not to make every title readable to a global audience. The point is to make the regulars feel like the stream is theirs.

Streams Charts also lists the channel as Bulgarian-language, Partner status, male, and tied to Bulgaria. Its page has some messy follower data, so the safer thing is to focus on the parts that line up across public sources: Partner status, Bulgarian language, regular live activity, and strong Bulgarian ranking.

That local-first setup is why the channel feels different from a generic League streamer. A random viewer can understand the game. The real audience is there for the Bulgarian commentary, the chat relationship, the running jokes, and the way stefkicha reacts to whatever is happening on screen.

What he streams

stefkicha1 is mostly Just Chatting and League of Legends right now. TwitchMetrics says he usually streams Just Chatting. StreamRecorder's tracked category breakdown listed Just Chatting far ahead, then League of Legends, then a smaller IRL slice. Streams Charts recent rows showed both League of Legends and Just Chatting across late-July entries.

The recent stream titles are their own little language. TwitchMetrics listed `ДЕН 13 Ф КОРЕА НАМИРАМЕ СЕ Ф СРЕДНАТА ЗИМЯ`, `ДЕН 12 В КОРЕЯ ВРЕМЕТО Е ЛЕЩА ГОЛЯМ ЛИГА ГРАЙНД`, and another long League stream around the same Korea-trip/League-grind arc. StreamRecorder showed similar rows like `ДЕН 13 PLAT 1 43/12`, `ДЕН 12 В КОРЕЯ ВРЕМЕТО Е ЛЕЩА ГОЛЯМ ЛИГА ГРАЙНД`, and `ДЕН 11 В КОРЕЯ ТЕЖЪК ЛИГА ГРАЙНД 22W-3L`.

Even if you do not read Bulgarian, the shape is obvious: numbered days, Korea, League grind, rank progress, and a creator turning a trip plus a game queue into a stream storyline. That kind of format is good for regular viewers because every stream feels like the next episode instead of a random live notification.

League is a big part of the channel identity too. TwitchMetrics top clips include League of Legends clips like `HEKTOOOOOOOOOOOR`, `THE MOST EPIC INT SION END AND VICTORY`, and `PREVYRTQH IGRATA`. Instagram search results also showed a League clip with Teemo and hashtags around League of Legends memes.

The current numbers

The 30-day numbers are strong for a Bulgarian-language channel. TwitchTracker's overview showed 137 hours streamed, 219 average viewers, 618 peak viewers, and 38,457 followers gained for its selected period. TwitchMetrics showed 169 hours streamed, 33,888 hours watched, 200 average viewers, and 618 peak viewers in the last 30 days.

Streams Charts showed a lower recent window: 154 hours and 45 minutes streamed, 13,564 hours watched, 88 average viewers, 184 peak viewers, 58,927 live views, and 184 followers gained. That page also had conflicting follower data, so the article does not treat one follower number as the only truth.

What does line up is the pattern: stefkicha1 streams a lot, has Partner status, ranks highly in Bulgarian Twitch, and has a real live audience. TwitchMetrics listed 119,008 followers at capture, while Streams Charts showed a lower 43.5K follower count, which is why the clean article language avoids over-fighting the exact number.

The stream-by-stream numbers also show a working channel, not just a big old follow count. TwitchMetrics listed recent streams with 147 average and 192 peak viewers, 70 average and 89 peak, and 134 average and 172 peak. Those are normal live rooms where chat can still feel personal while the creator has enough viewers to keep the stream moving.

YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok

Stefkicha has a small but active YouTube trail. Search results list `@Stefkicha1` at 4.6K subscribers and 784 videos, and the YouTube about result links out to Twitch, TikTok, Instagram reels, and Discord. That is not a huge YouTube-first creator setup, but it gives viewers somewhere to watch clips and older uploads.

The YouTube search results around him are very Bulgarian-streamer-core. There are reaction videos to Bulgarian streamer highlights, compilation reactions, playlist names like `RESIDENT EVIL 7 SCARY GAME`, `twitch ban`, `Най-доброто от стефкича1`, and `Liar's Bar`. The channel feels like an extension of the stream instead of a separate polished show.

Instagram is bigger than YouTube for his public profile. Search results list `@stefkicha` with 9.5K+ followers, 88 following, and 1,720 posts. The bio is in Bulgarian and has the same blunt tone as the Twitch side. Instagram clips and reels around him also show other Bulgarian accounts tagging his Twitch handle and reposting stream bits.

TikTok is linked from the YouTube about result as `@stefkicha1`. For a creator like this, short-form clips are useful because the joke or reaction does not need a full VOD. A funny League play, a Bulgaria-specific joke, a Korea-trip bit, or a weird Just Chatting exchange can travel faster as a short clip than as a five-hour archive.

Why viewers watch stefkicha1

Viewers watch stefkicha1 because the stream feels specific. It is Bulgarian, it is blunt, it has its own rhythm, and it does not seem worried about making every joke legible to outsiders. That is usually a good sign for a regional creator. The regulars know what the room is.

The content mix also gives people different reasons to stay. League viewers can follow the grind and the ranked progress. Just Chatting viewers can show up for the personality and the Bulgarian chat. Travel or IRL viewers can follow the Korea titles. Clip viewers can catch the funniest bit later on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Twitch clips, or other repost accounts.

His channel also has a directness that makes the profile easy to understand. The bio is short. The titles are loud. The streams are long. The categories are obvious. The community knows the jokes. There is not a lot of packaging between the creator and the viewer.

That is why the exact follower discrepancy between tracker pages does not really change the story. stefkicha1 is clearly not a random small channel. He is a Bulgarian Twitch Partner with high local rankings, heavy airtime, live chat energy, and enough recognizable clips that people outside the main channel are reposting him.

Where to follow stefkicha1

Twitch is the main place to watch stefkicha1 live. The handle is `stefkicha1`, the channel language is Bulgarian, and the content sits mostly around Just Chatting, League of Legends, and occasional IRL/travel streams.

YouTube is `@Stefkicha1`, with hundreds of uploads and links back to Twitch, TikTok, Instagram, and Discord. Instagram is `@stefkicha`, and TikTok is `@stefkicha1`.

For stats, TwitchTracker, TwitchMetrics, Streams Charts, and StreamRecorder are the most useful public pages. They do not all agree perfectly, but together they show a busy Bulgarian Partner channel with a clear audience.

The quick version

stefkicha1 is a Bulgarian Twitch Partner known for Just Chatting, League of Legends, long streams, Korea-trip titles, clips, and a community that clearly understands his humor.

TwitchTracker ranks him #4 among Bulgarian channels and inside Twitch's top 0.14%, while TwitchMetrics ranks him #4 among Bulgarian channels and #1 among Bulgarian Just Chatting channels for its 30-day window.

Public 30-day stat pages showed roughly 137 to 169 hours streamed, 88 to 219 average viewers, 184 to 618 peak viewers, and heavy activity across Just Chatting, League of Legends, and some IRL/travel streams.

Streamable is happy to support stefkicha1'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 stefkicha1, the Bulgarian Twitch Partner known for Just Chatting, League of Legends, long streams, Korea-trip titles, clips, and a loyal Bulgarian audience.

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