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Streamable Creator Spotlight: YooNessa

A creator profile of YooNessa, the German Twitch and YouTube creator behind cozy vlogs, gaming streams, TikTok clips, and a long-running daily-life channel.

Written by Ryan Trark

6 min readcreator spotlightYooNessatwitchyoutubegerman

Who is YooNessa?

YooNessa is the creator name used by Vanessa Wolf, a German streamer and video creator who has built her public world across YouTube, Twitch, Instagram, TikTok, Discord, and Linktree. Public channel pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed the main YooNessa YouTube channel at 33.6K subscribers, giving her a public audience comfortably above 10K. SullyGnome also listed the Twitch channel `yoonessa` as a German-language affiliate with a current Twitch profile and a 2021 creation date.

That mix matters because YooNessa is not only a Twitch handle. Her public Linktree points fans toward Twitch, Discord, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, BeReal, and a vlog channel. The wording is casual and familiar, with a German greeting that feels like someone opening the door to a room that already knows her. It is less like a clean media kit and more like a creator's actual map: here is the stream, here is the community, here are the videos, here is where the regulars can keep up.

Fans who meet her through Twitch will see the live side first. Fans who find her through YouTube will probably see the older video creator side first. Fans who land on Instagram may only know the short-form clips, selfies, creator events, daily updates, and Twitch references. All of those versions fit together better than they look at first glance. YooNessa has the shape of a creator who treats the internet like a diary, a hangout, and a stream room at the same time.

The short version: YooNessa is a German creator with a main YouTube audience above 33K subscribers, a Twitch channel with active German-language streaming history, a separate daily vlog channel, and a social hub that points fans toward the places where she posts and goes live.

How fans know her

YooNessa's public YouTube footprint is the easiest place to understand why fans stick around. The main channel carries the name `YooNessa` and the public page showed 33.6K subscribers on July 5, 2026. Her linked vlog channel, DailyYooNessa, describes itself in German as a place for daily videos from her life, with a schedule that points viewers toward regular uploads and the main YooNessa channel. The tone is friendly, a little handwritten, and clearly meant for people who like following a creator through ordinary days, not only through big uploads.

That old-school YouTube feeling is important. A lot of current live creators are built entirely out of short clips and stream highlights. YooNessa's public pages feel more layered than that. The vlog channel points to everyday life, events, travel, games, and regular fan check-ins. The main channel gives the larger subscriber proof. Twitch gives the live room. Instagram and TikTok give the faster social feed. Instead of one platform carrying everything, each page catches a slightly different version of the same creator.

Her Linktree also makes the fan path plain. It lists Twitch and Discord near the top, then Instagram, email, TikTok, YouTube, and BeReal. That ordering says a lot without overexplaining it. Twitch is where fans can catch the live version. Discord is where the community can keep talking. YouTube is where longer videos live. Instagram and TikTok are for the lighter check-ins, clips, and creator-life posts that keep people aware between streams.

YooNessa's audience probably includes a few different types of fans: people who started with YouTube and still like the personal updates, Twitch viewers who care about the live chat, German gaming viewers who like cozy variety streams, and social followers who mostly see clips and photos. That kind of audience can look scattered from the outside, but it is normal for a creator who has been posting long enough to have several entry points.

The Twitch side

Twitch is the live side of YooNessa's profile. SullyGnome listed `YooNessa` with a German-language channel, affiliate status, a channel creation date of April 28, 2021, and a current follower count a little above 2K when checked on July 5, 2026. That Twitch number is smaller than her YouTube audience; the broader public count comes from her 33.6K-subscriber YouTube channel. But Twitch is still a big part of the creator story because it shows where the community gathers in real time.

The public Twitch trail points toward a creator who streams games and hangout-style sessions rather than one narrow format. Recent public search snippets around the channel mention games like R.E.P.O. and Palia, Twitch Partner or affiliate talk in clips, and German stream language. The exact game changes are less important than the room itself. YooNessa's stream identity reads like cozy German variety with a lot of fan familiarity around it.

That can be a nice change from channels that feel built only for highlight moments. A YooNessa stream does not need to be a giant one-night event to make sense. The value is in fans already knowing her rhythm: the voice, the chat tone, the games, the community references, and the way she moves between YouTube updates and Twitch sessions. A creator with older YouTube roots often brings a different kind of patience to live content. The audience is not only waiting for one clip; they are used to checking in.

The live room also gives fans a more immediate version of someone they may have followed for years through videos. That is part of the appeal of a creator like YooNessa. YouTube can make a creator feel familiar, but Twitch lets viewers see the unedited version: the small reactions, the chat replies, the quiet stretches, the game frustration, and the little jokes that do not need to become a polished upload.

YouTube is the long memory

The main YooNessa YouTube channel is the cleanest public proof that her audience is bigger than the Twitch number alone suggests. Public YouTube fetches showed 33.6K subscribers on July 5, 2026. That makes YouTube the clearest public measure of her larger audience, but it also explains the shape of her creator identity. She is not a streamer who suddenly opened a channel last week. She has a visible video archive and a separate daily-life channel connected through her public links.

DailyYooNessa is the more personal half of that setup. The channel description on her Linktree welcomes viewers into her world, says the vlog channel is for daily videos from her life, and points fans back to the main YooNessa channel. That sounds simple, but it is exactly the kind of detail fans care about. People follow vlog channels because they want continuity. They want the creator's errands, events, routines, updates, and side quests, not only the biggest stream title.

That long-memory side makes the Twitch channel easier to understand too. When someone already knows a creator from years of videos, a stream can feel less like a performance and more like a live extension of the same person. YooNessa's public pages lean into that. They do not hide the personal-video side behind a separate brand. The same creator name shows up across Twitch, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Discord, and Linktree.

For fans, that means there are a few ways to follow without feeling lost. If they want live chat, Twitch is the obvious spot. If they want longer videos, the main YouTube channel and DailyYooNessa make more sense. If they want quick updates, Instagram and TikTok are easier. The creator name stays stable across those paths, which is a bigger deal than it sounds. Fans do not have to decode five unrelated aliases just to figure out where to go next.

Why fans keep showing up

Fans keep showing up for YooNessa because the public profile feels personal without needing to be dramatic. The German greeting on her Linktree, the daily vlog channel, the Twitch room, and the social pages all point toward the same kind of creator relationship: regular check-ins, small updates, games, community chat, and a sense that viewers are following a real person through different parts of her online life.

That style is easy to underrate. It is not always the loudest format on a platform. It usually grows through repetition: another stream, another video, another event post, another Discord reminder, another little clip that makes sense to regulars. YooNessa's public pages show that pattern pretty clearly. She has the subscriber base of someone with a real video audience, plus the Twitch setup of someone who still wants the live room to matter.

The German-language angle gives the channel a more specific feel too. She is not sanding everything down into generic English creator copy. The public descriptions, channel links, and social snippets keep the language and tone close to her audience. That matters for fans because creator communities usually feel strongest when they are allowed to sound like themselves. YooNessa's pages feel local and familiar in that way.

Her profile also has a calm kind of range. There is room for gaming, events, daily updates, personal posts, and fan links without forcing every piece into one strict box. One viewer might care about Palia or R.E.P.O. clips. Another might come from daily vlogs. Another might only notice her through Instagram. Another might be in Discord waiting for the next stream. None of those paths cancel each other out. They make the channel feel lived in.

Where to follow YooNessa

The main public video hub is the YooNessa YouTube channel, which showed 33.6K subscribers when checked on July 5, 2026. That is the easiest place to see the bigger audience behind the name. DailyYooNessa is the linked vlog channel for more personal, regular updates from her life.

Twitch at `yoonessa` is the live room. SullyGnome lists the channel as German-language, affiliate, and created in April 2021, with the channel recently online in early July 2026. That is the place to look when fans want the unedited version of YooNessa with chat.

Instagram at `@yoonessa` and the official Linktree are the easiest social signposts. The Linktree ties together Twitch, Discord, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, BeReal, contact links, and the vlog channel, so it is the best public map if someone is trying to follow the full creator setup.

The quick version: YooNessa is a German YouTube and Twitch creator with a 33K-plus public YouTube audience, a German-language Twitch room, a daily vlog side, and a community that follows her through videos, live chat, and social updates instead of only one platform.

Streamable is happy to support YooNessa'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 creator profile of YooNessa, the German Twitch and YouTube creator behind cozy vlogs, gaming streams, TikTok clips, and a long-running daily-life channel.

How long should this setup take?

Most users can complete this in about 6 to 8 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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