- Disguised Toast receives appreciation from fans online. Jeremy 'Disguised Toast' Wang is a popular streamer who is known as one of the best Among Us players in the world. Initially a Twitch.
- One streamer who accidently invoked Twitch's ire recently is Disguised Toast. Although Jeremy 'Disguised Toast' Wang, the OfflineTV member known well for his Hearthstone and Among Us content, has.
Jeremy Wang (born 25 November 1991), better known by the alias Disguised Toast, is a Taiwanese-Canadian streamer, YouTuber, and Internet personality. He got his start on YouTube, creating videos about the digital card game Hearthstone. Wang later began streaming on Twitch, before signing an. Disguised Toast, a well-known streamer on Twitch, recently got a temporary ban. He explained in a few tweets recently that he wasn’t too sure as to why he got this temporary ban in the first place. Disguised Toast gives you an indepth look on how much income Twitch Streamers, such as Ninja, Shroud, Dr Disrespect, really make.Subscribe to Disguised Toast.
Popular streamer Disguised Toast makes a surprise return to Twitch just months after leaving the platform to join Facebook Gaming. The streamer signed an exclusive deal with Facebook Gaming in November after revealing that he felt unable to grow his brand on Twitch.
On April 22, 2020, Disguised Toast came back to Twitch to host a Just Chatting stream. While some of the streamer's fans asked if it was 'legal' for him to be streaming on Twitch, Disguised Toast confirmed that it was all above board. Disguised Toast told his viewers, of which there were 22,000, that Facebook is fine with it and told him 'you go get ‘em!' when he asked if he could do a Twitch stream.
RELATED: Female Streamer Shames Viewers That Can't Subscribe
This isn't a full move back to Twitch and Disguised Toast was quick to make that clear to fans. The streamer said that after five months, he is happy with the move to Facebook Gaming and it has been good for his mental health. He enjoys being able to play whatever game he wants with who he wants and he is no longer angry at his chat. When revealing why he left Twitch for Facebook Gaming, Disguised Toast talked about the 'pressure' he had felt from fans, and it seems he has been able to get away from that with the new exclusivity deal.
Viewers will have noticed some big changes to the streamer's Twitch profile though as they can no longer become a Disguised Toast subscriber. He also doesn't have a Twitch Partner badge, meaning he can't make money from ads such as the notorious Coke video.
Some did donate money to support the streamer. However, as he is one of the richest gaming streamers and has said before that he doesn't need the money, Disguised Toast donated it to coronavirus relief efforts.
Disguised Toast may no longer be a Twitch Partner, but the streamer did seem to enjoy his return to Twitch. The offline screen on his Twitch page says that he will be 'live whenever' and that people should follow the stream to see when he's live next. He'll likely keep his Twitch streams to Just Chatting and use Facebook Gaming for games.
It seems unlikely that other former Twitch stars will return to the site after leaving for other platforms, as not all of them left the site on such good terms. Mixer streamer Ninja has criticized Twitch several times since leaving the site so that's one streamer fans shouldn't expect to come back soon.
MORE: Doom: 5 Video Game Villains Doomguy Can Beat (& 5 That He Can't)
Source: Twitch
Disguised Toast Twitch Earning
Watch Dogs Legion is Becoming Its Own Worst Enemy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
{{bottomLinkPreText}}{{bottomLinkText}} This page is based on a Wikipedia article written by contributors (read/edit).Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply.
Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
Disguised Toast Twitch Stats
Cover photo is available under {{::mainImage.info.license.name || 'Unknown'}} license.Cover photo is available under {{::mainImage.info.license.name || 'Unknown'}} license. Credit: (see original file).