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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Zugorow
A creator profile of Zugorow, the Brazilian GTA RP streamer behind @Zugorow on YouTube, Kick, Twitch, and X.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is Zugorow?
Zugorow is a Brazilian streamer and video creator best known for Portuguese-language gaming streams, GTA roleplay, and a long-running creator identity that uses the same handle across YouTube, Kick, Twitch, X, Instagram, and Discord. Fans see the name most clearly on YouTube, where the public `@Zugorow` channel showed 53.3K subscribers when checked on July 5, 2026, and on Kick, where the live channel showed about 9.9K followers and recent IRL and GTA-related streams.
The identity link is clean. His Kick profile uses `Zugorow`, his YouTube channel uses `@Zugorow`, his X profile points people to `twitch.tv/zugorow`, and older YouTube live archive descriptions list the same cluster of links: YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, Twitch, and Discord. That matters for fans because Zugorow is not a one-platform name. He is one of those creators whose audience has moved with him through videos, clips, live rooms, and roleplay servers.
His public bio is simple and streamer-native: gaming first, live community first, and a lot of GTA RP energy. The X profile describes him as a streamer tied to Twitch, Prodigy RP, and FiveM. His current Kick page leans into Portuguese live scheduling, with a posted routine of streams from Monday through Saturday from 14:00 to 00:00, plus a surprise Sunday slot. That is a heavy schedule, and it explains why the channel feels less like a side project and more like a daily hangout for viewers who follow Brazilian roleplay scenes.
Zugorow's current audience also makes more sense when you look at the split between platforms. The Kick channel is where recent live streams and IRL tests are happening. The YouTube channel is the larger public archive, with old Fortnite videos, GTA RP clips, shorts, and a subscriber base big enough to prove that the name already had a real audience before the latest Kick activity. For fans, the picture is straightforward: YouTube tells you how long the creator has been around, Kick tells you what the live room feels like now.
How he built the name
Zugorow has the footprint of a creator who spent years uploading, clipping, and streaming before the current live platform cycle. His YouTube channel includes older Fortnite videos with tens of thousands of views, including uploads built around squads, friends, and Brazilian gaming jokes. The popular-video shelf showed videos from years ago with 70K, 80K, 90K, and 100K-plus views, which is the kind of archive that usually comes from steady posting rather than one lucky stream.
That older YouTube era matters because it gives the current live room a backstory. A lot of viewers do not discover a streamer through a polished intro page. They find a clip, hear a friend mention a roleplay character, or remember an old video from a different game. Zugorow's channel shows that path pretty clearly. Fortnite was a big part of the older visible archive. More recent public pages point toward GTA V, Prodigy RP, Kick livestreams, and occasional IRL tests.
His older live archive descriptions also show a creator who kept his audience connected across places. A YouTube live archive for Valorant pointed viewers to his main YouTube channel, a cuts channel, Twitter, Instagram, Twitch, and Discord. That may sound like basic creator admin, but it is the boring part that keeps a community together. When a creator changes games or streaming homes, the fans need a path. Zugorow has been leaving those paths in public for years.
The current Kick profile has that same practical creator feel. It lists a streaming schedule, a gaming PC, a streaming PC, a capture card, and an ExitLag discount. The listed setup is not just vanity spec talk. It tells fans that the stream is built like a real live production: one machine for gaming, another for stream handling, and enough hardware detail for viewers who care about how the broadcast is made. For a GTA RP streamer, that matters. Long sessions, voice chat, game capture, browser alerts, and stable output all have to run for hours without the whole room falling apart.
That is why Zugorow's public story reads like a working streamer story instead of a sudden viral profile. He had video history, link discipline, community places, regular live activity, and enough audience movement to make the handle recognizable across YouTube, Kick, X, Twitch, and Discord. The specific games changed, but the creator loop stayed familiar: go live, make moments, clip them, keep people in the room, and give fans somewhere to come back tomorrow.
What Zugorow streams now
Right now, the easiest public read on Zugorow is Kick plus GTA RP. Streams Charts listed Zugorow under Kick with Portuguese language, Brazil, Grand Theft Auto V, Counter-Strike 2, and other recent categories, with the last 30 days showing heavy airtime and an average audience above one thousand viewers. KickCharts also tracked the channel's Kick growth and recent clips. Those numbers will move, but the pattern is useful: this is not a channel that only goes live for a quick appearance. It is a frequent live channel with long sessions and a clear game center.
His Kick page recently showed a live title in Portuguese that translated roughly as a quick night stream and IRL test. Other public Kick snippets and Streams Charts listings showed Prodigy RP titles, GTA V sessions, and title text pointing viewers toward YouTube, livepix, and other stream commands. That mix says a lot. Zugorow is not only sitting in one category forever. He is moving between GTA RP, IRL tests, and community-driven live moments while keeping the same audience language and personality.
GTA RP is a natural fit for that kind of streamer. It rewards people who can stay in character, react fast, keep long story threads alive, and make quiet stretches still feel watchable. A good RP stream is not only about the loud chase or the big argument. It is also about the hour before it, when chat knows something could happen and the streamer is carrying the scene until it does. Zugorow's recent titles around Prodigy RP suggest that is where a lot of his live attention is going.
Prodigy RP itself is a big enough world that fans often follow the server as much as the individual streamer. HasRoot tracks Prodigy RP streamers and characters, and the official Prodigy Roleplay site describes its streamer page as a place to watch the community come alive through creators. That helps explain why someone like Zugorow can pull a loyal audience through long roleplay arcs. Viewers are not only checking in on a person. They are checking in on a city, a server, ongoing storylines, friends, rivals, cops, criminals, and whatever strange situation the stream drops into next.
The Portuguese-language side also matters. A lot of English-speaking streaming coverage talks about GTA RP through NoPixel, American Twitch clips, or big English Kick rooms. Zugorow sits in a different viewer lane: Brazilian audience, Portuguese stream culture, and a community that can move between YouTube history and Kick's current live discovery. For fans who understand the language, the channel is not a translation exercise. It is a daily room with its own jokes, schedule, and rhythm.
Why fans watch
Fans watch Zugorow because he has the two things that keep a roleplay streamer from feeling disposable: a recognizable voice and a regular place to be. The public schedule on Kick tells viewers when to expect him. The YouTube archive gives fans clips and old uploads to fall back into. The X bio and public links keep the same handle attached to the same creator identity. Nothing about that is flashy, but it is exactly how a streamer becomes part of someone's routine.
Roleplay viewers also tend to care about continuity. They want the little references, the returning characters, the running jokes, and the consequences from yesterday's stream. Zugorow's GTA and Prodigy RP focus gives viewers that kind of thread. The stream can be funny, tense, loud, quiet, or weird depending on the scene, but the audience keeps showing up because they know the channel is not just chasing a single clip. It is building live context over many hours.
Another part of the appeal is that Zugorow still feels like a gaming creator, not a celebrity cameo using streaming as a quick stop. The setup notes, daily schedule, older uploads, and repeated live categories all point to someone who treats the channel like the main room. That matters to fans. When a streamer is actually around, viewers can form habits: dinner with the stream on, Discord open, VOD later, clips in the group chat, comments after a strange RP scene, and the same username waiting in chat the next day.
The IRL tests are interesting too. They give fans a different angle on a creator they mostly know through games and RP. A quick IRL stream does not need to be a giant travel production to matter. Sometimes viewers just want to see the person outside the game window, hear them talk without a character layer, and watch the live setup get tested in the real world. Zugorow's recent public Kick title around a quick IRL test suggests he is at least playing with that side of live content.
That kind of movement is good for a channel. GTA RP can be the home base, YouTube can be the archive, Kick can be the daily live room, and IRL tests can keep the creator from feeling locked in one box. Fans who only want the roleplay can stay for that. Fans who like the person behind the stream get extra reasons to check in. The channel does not need to explain itself with a huge rebrand. The handle is already the brand: Zugorow goes live, the room knows what to expect, and the story keeps moving.
Where to follow Zugorow
Start with Kick if you want the current live stream. The public Kick page is where Zugorow has recent activity, current titles, a posted schedule, setup notes, and the live chat room. It is also where fans can catch the mix of Prodigy RP, GTA V, IRL tests, and whatever the next long session turns into.
Use YouTube if you want the archive and the larger public proof of the creator's history. The `@Zugorow` channel has more than 53K subscribers, hundreds of videos, old Fortnite uploads, GTA clips, shorts, and enough past material to understand how long the name has been around. If you find him live first, YouTube is where you go afterward to see the older version of the channel.
X is useful for identity and updates because the public profile ties the handle back to Twitch, Prodigy RP, and FiveM. The older YouTube descriptions also point to Instagram and Discord, which are the usual places for schedule notes, community posts, and off-stream chatter. Like most streamers, the best follow path depends on what you want: live show on Kick, video archive on YouTube, quick updates on X, and community links through the socials he has shared publicly.
Zugorow is easiest to understand as a daily Brazilian live creator with a real archive behind him. He has the subscriber proof, the Kick activity, the roleplay lane, the cross-platform links, and the kind of schedule that lets fans make the stream part of a routine. That is why the channel feels worth watching now: it has history, but it is still actively being shaped live.
Streamable is happy to support Zugorow'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 Zugorow, the Brazilian GTA RP streamer behind @Zugorow on YouTube, Kick, Twitch, and X.
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