Adin Ross claims Asmongold could become insanely rich by leaving Twitch & going full-time on Kick

Adin Ross claims Asmongold could become insanely rich by leaving Twitch & going full-time on Kick

Adin Ross has urged Asmongold to go full-time on Kick so that he can make even more money despite his already “nuts” income, and so the pair can stream together. 

Back in early May, Asmongold claimed that Twitch was becoming “irrelevant” and that he would start to look into the idea of multistreaming. The former OTK star shut down any ideas of moving to YouTube due to their rules, though, leaving him with Kick and others as options.

On June 2, Kick announced that Asmon had signed up to multistream on the Stake-backed platform. He went live a day later, bringing in around 100,000 viewers on Kick alone. 

As part of the Kick Partner Program, the World of Warcraft streamer is paid for his viewer count, as well as his subscribers. In his first two streams, he’d made around $36,000, compared to $32,000 on Twitch. So, Adin Ross wants him to go full-time on Kick. 

Adin Ross wants to collab with Asmongold

The Kick co-owner, who has been trying to get more streamers to make the jump, urged Asmon to ditch Twitch so that the two could stream together, and so he could make more money. 

“He’s multistreaming. I don’t know what he worked out with Kick, but if you multistream, you’re not going to get the highest KCIP (Kick Creator Incentive Program) and his viewers are still on Twitch. If all of his viewers are on one platform, oh my god, he’d be rich,” Adin said. 

“Whenever you come full-time to Kick, I’ll take you shopping,” the IRL streamer offered. “I’ll fly out to wherever you are, whatever state you in, bro, I’ll fly out and we’ll go splurge.”

Asmongold has said that he has no plans to ditch Twitch full-time, and that the Amazon-owned platform has been supportive of him multistreaming on Kick.

He does have issues with their moderation and urged Twitch to make some changes moving forward. 

The former OTK member isn’t all that money-focused too, seeing as he ditched his bigger main Twitch account when it got “associated with a lot of sponsor obligations and brand deals.”


Content shared from www.dexerto.com.

Share This Article