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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Zoe Baptiste
A creator profile of Zoe Baptiste, the dance creator behind @zoebaptistee on TikTok and Twitch and @zobaptiste on Instagram.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is Zoe Baptiste?
Zoe Baptiste is the dance creator behind `@zoebaptistee`, the handle fans see on TikTok and Twitch, and `@zobaptiste` on Instagram. Her Instagram profile checked on July 5, 2026 showed 316K followers, described her as being in her `dance battle era`, and pointed people straight to `TikTok: @zoebaptistee` and `Twitch: @zoebaptistee`. That makes the identity link clean: the dance creator, the Instagram profile, and the live channel all point back to the same public name.
Zoe is best known as a short-form dance creator. Famous Birthdays describes her as a TikTok creator and social media personality known for choreographed dance performances, with more than 2.9 million followers on TikTok. Her Linktree keeps the same picture simple: Zoe Baptiste links Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat, and a TrendKids YouTube page from one official profile. The live handle is newer in the public story, but it is not random. It sits beside the same TikTok and Instagram audience that already knows her for dance clips.
That is the easy read for fans. Zoe built attention through movement, timing, friends, and public dance challenges, then opened a live room where the same audience can watch the person behind the clips for longer than a few seconds. Her Twitch bio is short: `new 2 this but im true 2 this`. It sounds like exactly the kind of line a short-form creator would use while testing live streaming without acting like she has been doing it forever.
What makes Zoe interesting is that she does not need to explain why people follow her. You can see the format fast: public dance clips, group energy, direct camera presence, challenge culture, and a real face fans recognize from For You Page-style content. Twitch gives that format another layer. Instead of only seeing the finished dance, viewers can see the hangout, the jokes, the practice, the friends, the reactions, and the downtime around the finished post.
How Zoe became a dance creator people recognize
Zoe's public profile starts with TikTok dance. Famous Birthdays says she made her TikTok debut in early 2020 with a video recorded with classmates, then became known for choreographed dances set to popular songs and sounds. It also notes that she is part of the TrendKids dance group on social media and that one of her early acting-skit videos passed 2 million combined views. The details are very TikTok-era: friends, school, quick concepts, dances in public spaces, and clips that move because they are easy to watch and easy to copy.
Favikon's creator profile gives more shape to that rise. It describes Zoe as a UK-based dancer and content creator whose work blends dance, fashion, and storytelling. It also points to the Push2Start dance challenge as one of her bigger public successes, with fans and other creators recreating the choreography. That part matters because dance creators are not only posting finished performances. They are making tiny formats other people can join. When a challenge catches, the original creator becomes part of thousands of other people's posts.
Zoe's Instagram gives the current version of that same lane. The public bio is not overloaded with brand language. It says she is in her dance battle era, then sends people to TikTok and Twitch. That is cleaner than a long resume because it matches how fans actually move around: they see a Reel, find the TikTok, check the live channel, and maybe watch a longer YouTube clip if they want more context.
YouTube fills in another piece. Zoe's public YouTube channel has short dance uploads and clips tied to songs, collaborations, and behind-the-scenes-style titles. Her Linktree also points to `YOUTUBE : TRENDKIDS`, described there as dancers and best friends with new videos every Tuesday. That matches the public image from TikTok and Instagram: Zoe's content is not built as a solo monologue. It usually works better with other people in frame, a shared joke, a dance everyone can read quickly, or a challenge that turns into a group moment.
That group energy is why her live channel makes sense. A lot of dance creators can feel distant when every post is perfectly clipped. Zoe's public lane has always been more social than that. The live room lets the audience watch the unedited parts: who is around, what everyone is trying to film, what gets funny before it becomes a caption, and how a creator who is used to quick posts handles a room that can talk back.
What Zoe streams now
Zoe's Twitch channel is still early compared with her TikTok and Instagram audience, which is part of why it is interesting. Twitch's public page for `zoebaptistee` showed the bio `new 2 this but im true 2 this`, and TwitchTracker had the account indexed under the same handle. Public TwitchTracker statistics checked in early July 2026 showed the channel sitting around 1.2K Twitch followers, which is much smaller than the Instagram and TikTok audience attached to the same creator identity.
That gap is normal when a short-form creator starts taking live more seriously. TikTok and Instagram are where fans first discover the finished clip. Twitch is where the creator has to hold attention without a cut every two seconds. For Zoe, that shift can actually work because dance content has so much off-camera life around it. Viewers can hang around before a filmed idea, during practice, after a take fails, or while friends react to whatever just happened.
The recent public context around Zoe also points in that direction. A Family Ties episode from earlier in 2026 billed Zoe around dance battling delivery drivers, creating a Fortnite dance, and wild hot takes. A more recent YouTube upload from July 2026 was titled `WE FINALLY MET... featuring Zoe Baptiste`, putting her into a creator-collab setting where fans are watching the interaction as much as the polished dance. Those are the kinds of public appearances that translate naturally to a live stream because the point is not only the final routine. It is the personality around it.
Fans can expect the Twitch side to feel more like an open hangout than a perfectly organized show. That is not a criticism. It is usually the whole appeal when a creator crosses from short clips into live. The best moments are often the pauses, the back-and-forth with chat, the friend walking into frame at the wrong time, or the creator laughing because a bit went sideways. Zoe already has the short-form muscle. Twitch gives fans a slower room around it.
That also means the live channel will probably change shape as she gets more comfortable. Some streams may lean into chat. Some may sit around dance practice, music, reactions, collaborations, or casual IRL energy. Some may be short tests while the larger TikTok and Instagram machine keeps moving. The important thing for fans is that `zoebaptistee` is the public Twitch handle listed by Zoe's Instagram bio, so it is the right place to check when she wants to turn the creator page into a real-time room.
Why fans watch
Fans watch Zoe because she makes dance feel social. A lot of internet dance clips can look technically clean but cold. Zoe's public posts work because they feel like they came from a group chat that happened to know the choreography. There is usually a friend, a public setting, a challenge, a reaction, or a shared wink in the clip. That makes the dance easier to care about even if the viewer is not studying the steps.
The scale is real too. Instagram publicly showed 316K followers on July 5, 2026, and Famous Birthdays lists her TikTok audience above 2.9 million. Favikon's older profile put her TikTok audience at 2.6 million and described average views in the hundreds of thousands per post. The exact counts move, but the direction is obvious: Zoe is not a tiny account testing whether anyone recognizes her. She is a large short-form creator bringing that audience toward a live handle.
But the numbers are not the only reason the profile works. Zoe's content is built around moments people can repeat. Dance challenges travel because they give viewers a way to join instead of only watch. A good challenge becomes a template: learn the move, grab friends, copy the timing, add your own face, and post it back. Zoe's public profile has that kind of participatory energy, which is why fans can feel connected even before she goes live.
Live streaming adds a different kind of connection. On TikTok, a fan might see Zoe for 10 seconds and then scroll. On Twitch, they can watch her think through a bit, read chat, react to people, or stay in the room long enough for the personality to come through. That is especially useful for creators whose normal posts are built around movement. The stream gives fans a voice, a laugh, and a little extra context around the creator they already know from dance clips.
That is probably why Zoe's Twitch era is worth following early. The channel does not need to have the same numbers as TikTok on day one. It just needs to give fans a place to gather while the bigger audience learns that she is live. If even a small slice of the TikTok and Instagram crowd starts treating Twitch as the afterparty, the live room can become a much more personal version of the Zoe Baptiste feed.
Where to follow Zoe Baptiste
Instagram is the easiest public hub right now. Follow `@zobaptiste` for the clearest current bio, Reels, dance clips, public updates, and the direct pointer to `TikTok: @zoebaptistee` and `Twitch: @zoebaptistee`. It is also the clearest public audience signal, with 316K followers shown in the profile metadata checked on July 5, 2026.
TikTok is the main short-form dance home. Zoe's public identity is tied to `@zoebaptistee`, and reputable public creator pages describe that account as the place where she built a multi-million-follower dance audience. If you want the fastest version of her work, start there.
Twitch is where the live chapter is happening. The handle is also `zoebaptistee`, and the public Twitch bio says she is new to this but true to it. That is a good description of this chapter: a creator with a huge short-form base trying the slower, messier, more personal format of live streaming.
YouTube is useful for the wider archive. Zoe's personal YouTube page has dance uploads and shorts, while her Linktree points to TrendKids as a dancers-and-best-friends channel. The recent Family Ties appearance is also worth watching if you want to hear her talk through dance battles, Fortnite dance ideas, and creator life in a longer format than a Reel.
The quick map is simple: Instagram for the current public hub, TikTok for the dance engine, Twitch for the live room, YouTube for longer context, and Linktree when you want the official set of links in one place. Zoe's audience already knows the short clips. The fun part now is watching how that same energy stretches when the camera stays on.
The quick version
Zoe Baptiste is a UK dance creator best known online as `@zoebaptistee`, with a major TikTok audience, a 316K-follower Instagram hub at `@zobaptiste`, and a Twitch channel under the same `zoebaptistee` handle.
Her public profile is built around choreographed dance clips, public dance-battle energy, TrendKids connections, collaborations, and challenges that fans can recreate. Famous Birthdays lists her TikTok following above 2.9 million, while Favikon's profile highlights her UK dance ranking, Push2Start challenge momentum, and strong short-form engagement.
The Twitch side is newer, but it fits the rest of the story. Zoe's short-form audience already knows the finished dances. Live streaming gives them a place to see the longer room around those clips: chat, friends, reactions, practice, music, and whatever happens before the clean final version lands on TikTok or Instagram.
Streamable is happy to support Zoe Baptiste'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 Zoe Baptiste, the dance creator behind @zoebaptistee on TikTok and Twitch and @zobaptiste on Instagram.
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?
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What if the issue still is not resolved?
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