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Streamable Creator Spotlight: VarecRL
A creator profile of VarecRL, the English-language Twitch Affiliate tied to Varec on Kick, with six-figure Twitch followers, a small YouTube live channel, and a public move toward Kick.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is VarecRL?
VarecRL is an English-language Twitch Affiliate connected to the creator name Varec. The Twitch bio is short, but it says a lot: `A New Dawn • Kick.com/Varec`. That is basically the whole public story right now. The Twitch account has the big follower count, while the current push points people to Kick.
Viewers love watching VarecRL because the channel feels like a creator in the middle of a platform shift instead of a polished media brand. There is the older Twitch handle, the six-figure Twitch following, the Kick page under `VAREC`, and a tiny YouTube live channel that looks more like a side archive than the main stage.
The numbers are real, but they are messy. TwitchTracker lists VarecRL with 148,692 followers, Affiliate status, English language, and a Twitch account created on June 21, 2015. TwitchMetrics lists 148,693 Twitch followers and the same bio line pointing to Kick. SullyGnome also lists 148,692 followers. The queue snapshot had 148,691. Different pages, same basic answer: VarecRL clears the six-figure mark on Twitch.
The recent activity is where the profile gets more interesting. TwitchMetrics says VarecRL streamed 0 hours in the last 30 days and was last seen on May 28, 2026. SullyGnome's 30-day view also showed 0 streams, while its 365-day view showed the channel was last online six days before the page capture. Kick search results, meanwhile, listed `VAREC` with 17.7K followers and last live four days ago. So if you are looking for Varec right now, Kick appears to be the fresher public trail.
The Twitch trail
VarecRL's Twitch account has been around for a long time. TwitchTracker and SullyGnome both list the account creation date as June 21, 2015. That does not mean the creator has been live every week since then, but it does mean this is not a brand-new username that appeared yesterday.
The Twitch account is also not a tiny page with a lucky redirect. TwitchTracker puts the channel inside the top 2.16% of Twitch by its rank display, with 148,692 followers and Affiliate status. TwitchMetrics lists 148,693 followers. SullyGnome gives the same 148,692 follower number and marks the channel as English, Affiliate, not mature, created June 21, 2015.
The tracker pages disagree on how to frame the recent Twitch activity. TwitchMetrics says the channel had 0 hours live, 0 viewer hours, 0 peak viewers, and 0 follower change in the month from June 5 to July 5, 2026. Its channel details say first seen on January 22, 2026 and last seen on May 28, 2026. SullyGnome's 30-day page also showed 0 streams, but its year view showed 282 hours streamed, 111 streams, 1,770 hours watched, 6 average viewers, 201 peak viewers, and 148,670 followers gained.
That kind of mismatch usually means you have to read the public pages with some patience. Some sites are tracking the full Twitch account, some are only counting streams over their own threshold, and some are showing a recent window where the creator has not been active on Twitch. The clean read is this: VarecRL has a large Twitch follower base, but the freshest public activity does not look Twitch-first.
The Kick move
The Twitch bio points straight to `Kick.com/Varec`, and the Kick page is the clearest current home for the creator name Varec. Search results for the page listed 17.7K followers and said the channel was last live four days ago. That is a big clue because the Twitch tracker pages were mostly quiet for the last month.
The Kick side also looks more adult and less sanitized than the Twitch profile. Public Kick search results showed recent categories around Slots & Casino and Crypto & Trading, plus VODs with mature gates. That is part of the profile, so it should be said plainly. Some viewers follow creators across platforms because they like the person on camera. Others care a lot about the platform and category mix. Varec's current public trail sits on that line.
What makes the move easy to follow is that the names connect cleanly. Twitch is `VarecRL`, the Twitch bio says `Kick.com/Varec`, and the Kick channel is `VAREC`. There are plenty of creator profiles where the socials are scattered across old usernames and half-dead links. This one is simple: Twitch has the big historical audience, Kick is where the bio sends people now.
That also explains why a normal stats-only read would miss the actual story. If you only looked at VarecRL's 30-day Twitch activity, you would think the channel went quiet. If you read the bio and check Kick, the picture changes. The creator did not disappear from live streaming; the center of gravity appears to have moved.
What the numbers say
The follower count is the easiest part. TwitchTracker, TwitchMetrics, and SullyGnome all land around 148.7K Twitch followers. VarecRL is far past the point where the channel needs to prove there is an audience.
The recent Twitch numbers are not hype numbers. TwitchMetrics showed 0 hours live, 0 viewer hours, and 0 peak viewers in the last 30 days. SullyGnome's 30-day page also showed no streams. TwitchTracker's selected-period summary showed 16 hours streamed, 28 average viewers, 179 peak viewers, and a huge follower-gain number that does not line up cleanly with the other sites. The year view from SullyGnome showed 282 hours streamed and 111 streams, which gives the channel a real activity trail even if the last month is quiet.
The best way to read that is not `dead channel` and not `huge active Twitch star`. It is a creator profile with a big Twitch follower base, low recent Twitch activity, and a visible redirect toward Kick. That may not be as neat as a standard Twitch Partner bio, but it is probably closer to how many live creators actually move now. They build one account, test another platform, keep old links alive, and let the audience figure out where the next live stream is.
The Kick number is smaller but current. Search results for Kick listed 17.7K followers and recent live activity. That is still a serious audience, especially for a creator whose Twitch page now points there directly. When fans keep checking in after a platform move, that usually says they are following the person more than the purple checkmark, the category, or the exact site.
The YouTube side
Varec also has a small YouTube channel under `@VarecLIVE`. Search results list it as `Varec`, with 8 subscribers and 5 videos, and the description says it is the official live channel for Varec. That is tiny compared with the Twitch and Kick numbers, but it still matters because it shows another public handle using the same creator name.
The YouTube side does not look like a polished main channel. It looks more like a loose live-channel archive, with short clips and stream-related uploads. One search result title connects back to Twitch by naming `twitch varecrl`, which helps tie the handles together without needing to invent a bigger story than the public pages support.
That is useful context for fans because creators often have one main live platform and a few smaller pages that exist for clips, backups, experiments, or old uploads. Varec's YouTube does not seem to be where the audience is. It does make the cross-platform identity easier to map: VarecRL on Twitch, VAREC on Kick, VarecLIVE on YouTube.
It is also a reminder that follower counts alone do not tell the whole story. A creator can have 148K followers on one platform, 17.7K on another, and almost no YouTube footprint. That does not make the creator fake or the audience fake. It means the audience is not evenly spread across every site.
Why viewers watch VarecRL
Viewers watch VarecRL because the draw seems to be the creator, not one fixed category. TwitchMetrics labels the Twitch channel as Variety. Kick search results show the current side moving through adult categories and live hangout-style streams. The YouTube channel is tiny and clip-like. Put together, the profile reads like a creator who brings the same audience through different rooms instead of building everything around one game.
There is something pretty normal about that, even if the public stats look strange. A lot of live creators do not move in a straight line anymore. They stream on Twitch, try Kick, clip to YouTube, change titles, change categories, disappear from one tracker, show up on another, and keep the people who actually care checking the latest link.
VarecRL's audience clearly had a reason to hit follow on Twitch. The account has a long creation history and a follower count that most small streamers would be thrilled to have. The Kick page having 17.7K followers also suggests a chunk of that audience was willing to follow the name, not just the old platform.
That is probably the cleanest fan-facing version of the story. VarecRL is not a neat one-platform bio. It is a creator profile with a big Twitch past, a Kick-present signal, a small YouTube trail, and enough name recognition that the redirect matters.
Where to follow VarecRL
The Twitch handle is `varecrl`. That page has the large follower count, Affiliate status, English-language profile, and the bio pointing to Kick.
The Kick handle is `varec`. If you are trying to find the active live page, that is the link the Twitch bio pushes, and public search results showed recent live activity there.
The YouTube handle is `@VarecLIVE`. It is much smaller, but it is still part of the public trail and lines up with the Varec name.
The quick version
VarecRL is an English-language Twitch Affiliate with around 148.7K followers, a Twitch account created in June 2015, and a bio that points fans to `Kick.com/Varec`.
Public Twitch tracker pages show low recent Twitch activity, but SullyGnome's year view still lists 282 hours streamed, 111 streams, and a 201-viewer peak across the last 365 days.
The Kick page under `VAREC` looks like the more current live home, with search results listing 17.7K followers and recent activity, while `@VarecLIVE` on YouTube is a small side channel.
Streamable is happy to support VarecRL's streams and help keep them running clean so they can stay live without dealing with tech issues.
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What does this guide help with?
A creator profile of VarecRL, the English-language Twitch Affiliate tied to Varec on Kick, with six-figure Twitch followers, a small YouTube live channel, and a public move toward Kick.
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.
