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Streamable Creator Spotlight: StudyTme
A public creator profile of StudyTme, Giulia Mazza's Twitch channel for coworking, productivity, remote work, solo travel, IRL streams, Kenya charity work, and the CEOgang community.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is StudyTme?
StudyTme is Giulia Mazza's Twitch channel, built around coworking, study streams, productivity, remote work, solo travel, and IRL travel streams. The channel started with a very clear promise: come work, study, and stay accountable together. The newer version still has that core, but now it also follows Giulia through airports, cities, coworking days, long travel streams, charity trips, and community adventures.
Public Twitch profile data checked on July 4, 2026 showed StudyTme with 183,067 Twitch followers, Partner status, and a Twitch account created on October 29, 2020. Her Twitch bio introduces her as Giulia, a digital nomad and content creator focused on productivity, remote work, and solo travel. It also says she hosts coworking and study streams to help viewers stay on track, alongside IRL travel content.
That bio is still the cleanest summary of the channel. Viewers do not show up only to watch Giulia do things. A lot of people show up to do their own things beside her: studying, working, planning, editing, cleaning, finishing tasks, or just keeping a browser tab open so the day feels less lonely.
From study streams to travel streams
StudyTme makes sense because the old and new parts of the channel are connected. The study-stream version was about accountability. The travel-stream version is still about building a life in public and keeping people company while doing it. A coworking day, a Kenya charity stream, a Spain van trip, and a TwitchCon travel stream are not the same video, but they all come from the same idea: bring chat along while something real is happening.
Older public profile coverage described Giulia as a streamer who helped people unwind and get work done. Her public Reddit profile says she is a Twitch Partner streamer who helps people struggling with school and work, and invites them into the free Discord community. Her public X profile describes StudyTme as a virtual colleague, with Twitch Ambassador and Discord Partner labels.
Fans love watching StudyTme because the channel can be useful without feeling like homework. Some viewers come for the focus blocks. Some come for the travel. Some come for the planning talks. Some come for the chaos of a live IRL day. But the channel still feels like it belongs to one person with one clear personality: Giulia trying to build, learn, travel, and keep people moving with her.
The digital nomad part is not just a phrase in a bio. Recent public Twitch VODs showed Italy, Kenya, Nairobi, Tala, coffee roasting, school updates, parks, rollerskating, and planning future trips. Top VODs also show Spain solo van trip days, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Barcelona, TwitchCon, and older travel runs through Japan, Shanghai, and China.
The Kenya streams
StudyTme's recent public story is heavily tied to Kenya. Twitch VOD data from late June 2026 showed streams titled around Kenya, Nairobi, Tala, a Masai Mara safari, the National Museum, girls day, buying tiles for the school with Sister Hitha, school updates, coffee roasting, and a charity stream to help build a school.
That charity piece is supported by public fundraiser pages too. Tiltify pages for StudyTme and Gruppo Nairobi list Fund a School in Kenya and Time to Act for Kenya campaigns, with one archived StudyTme profile showing a completed 2,000 euro fundraiser. Gruppo Nairobi's own public page describes a primary school build in Ngunga, Kenya, and includes StudyTme in the 2026 Time to ACT project.
That gives the travel streams more weight than a normal trip itinerary. The stream is not only showing a city, a park, or a travel day. It is also showing a project, the people around it, and the messy real-life work around charity fundraising. Buying tiles for the school is not a glamorous title, but it is exactly the kind of specific thing that makes viewers feel like they are watching something real.
The Kenya uploads also carried over to YouTube. The StudyTme YouTube RSS feed showed July 2026 shorts and stream uploads around Kenya clips, a Kenya summary back in Italy, top StudyTme moments from Kenya, and public stream archives like CHAT HATES ME and SPACE DRAMA. That means the trip did not disappear after Twitch ended. It kept turning into clips and recap material for people who missed the live streams.
The live numbers
StudyTme is also a serious live channel by the numbers. TwitchTracker listed StudyTme as an English-language Partner channel, ranked #1,805 overall and #825 among English channels in its public view, with the channel inside Twitch's top 0.03%. Its selected public performance summary showed 139 hours streamed, 976 average viewers, a 2,612 peak, and 2,845 followers gained.
TwitchMetrics showed a June 5 to July 5, 2026 window with 144 hours live, 120,597 viewer hours, 833 average viewers, a 1,728 peak, and 1,717 followers gained. Its FAQ listed StudyTme as usually streaming IRL, ranked #54 for IRL and #21 for English IRL in the recent window. Streams Charts search metadata showed a similar current 30-day window with more than 138 hours live and around 886 average viewers.
Those are not background-noise numbers. That is a lot of live time and a steady enough audience to make the channel feel like a regular place. The productivity side especially depends on that. People need to know the stream will be there when they want to work or reset their day.
The top VODs also say a lot about what viewers respond to. TwitchMetrics listed big public VODs around Spain van trip subathon days, Masai Mara safari, Kenya charity streams, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, TwitchCon, Barcelona, Japan subathon days, Shanghai, and focus-with-me travel streams. The channel can be calm, useful, and travel-heavy, but the audience is big enough to follow through all of it.
YouTube, Instagram, Discord, and CEOgang
StudyTme's YouTube channel is active enough to matter. Public YouTube metadata checked on July 4, 2026 showed about 27,900 subscribers, and the channel bio calls it the official StudyTme channel. The RSS feed showed a mix of shorts, stream uploads, travel clips, Kenya posts, and full live-style uploads.
Instagram is bigger. Public Instagram search results showed Giulia Mazza | StudyTme at about 113,000 followers, with a bio around solo travel, Twitch streaming, live IRL adventures, and productivity. Threads search metadata also showed a StudyTme profile around supporting remote workers and students and finding an accountability buddy.
Discord is part of the identity too. The Twitch social links point to the CEOgang Discord, and the public invite page title shows StudyTme | CEOgang. That name fits the channel well. It is not only a fan server. It is the place where the study, remote-work, productivity, and accountability side can keep going when Giulia is offline.
That mix is why the channel has more staying power than a simple travel feed. YouTube catches the clips and uploads. Instagram shows the public-facing travel and creator side. Twitch is the live room. Discord is the community layer for people trying to actually get work done together.
Why fans stay
Fans stay with StudyTme because Giulia gives them more than passive entertainment. The channel has a practical reason to exist. If you need to study, work, clean, plan, or stop procrastinating, the stream can become a tiny external push. If you just want to travel with someone live, the stream can do that too.
The best part is that the productivity side does not make the travel side feel fake. Giulia can be in Kenya, Italy, Spain, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Japan, or Shanghai, and the channel still feels tied to the same person who built a community around accountability. The location changes. The relationship with chat stays familiar.
Viewers also get a creator who is comfortable showing unpolished days. Remote work and travel are not always pretty. Sometimes it is planning, luggage, coffee, transit, a long walk, a charity errand, a full-day stream, or a chat argument about what comes next. That is what makes the channel feel human.
StudyTme is one of the clearer examples of IRL streaming having an actual purpose beyond sightseeing. The stream can help people focus, show them a new city, support a fundraiser, introduce them to a community, and still leave room for jokes and weird clips.
Where to follow StudyTme
Twitch is the main home for live coworking, study sessions, IRL travel, charity streams, planning streams, and long community days.
YouTube is the best place for shorts, stream uploads, Kenya clips, travel recaps, and public archives. Instagram is the main visual social page for Giulia's travel and creator life. X is useful for announcements, fundraiser notes, and stream updates.
Discord is the place to understand the community behind the channel. If the Twitch room is the live coworking table, CEOgang is the group chat that keeps the accountability side alive between streams.
The quick version
StudyTme is Giulia Mazza's Twitch channel for coworking, study streams, remote work, solo travel, IRL, charity streams, and the CEOgang community.
The recent public story is Kenya-heavy, with charity streams, school updates, coffee roasting, Tala, Nairobi, parks, rollerskating, and a wider travel arc that also includes Italy, Spain, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Japan, and Shanghai.
That is why fans keep showing up. StudyTme can help people focus, take them somewhere new, and make a long stream feel like a shared workday or travel day instead of just background video.
Streamable is happy to support StudyTme's streams and help keep them running clean so she can stay live without dealing with tech issues.
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What does this guide help with?
A public creator profile of StudyTme, Giulia Mazza's Twitch channel for coworking, productivity, remote work, solo travel, IRL streams, Kenya charity work, and the CEOgang 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.
