Streamular spent four years selling Twitch followers. That business is closed.
This domain ran one of the better-known “free Twitch followers” operations from 2019 to late 2023. It is now under new, independent ownership — and it will never sell a follower, a viewer, or a view again. Here is the honest story of what happened, what those services really did, and what actually grows a Twitch channel.
What happened to Streamular?
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2019
Streamular launches as a Twitch growth shop: a “free Twitch followers” exchange plus paid packages of followers, live viewers, and channel views.
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2020–2022
The shop expands into TikTok, Spotify, SoundCloud, Pinterest, and Twitter packages, adds an affiliate program, and machine-translates itself into 100+ languages. Third-party traffic estimators put it in the tens of thousands of visits a month, and hundreds of customer reviews accumulate — delivery speed praised, bot-looking followers complained about.
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Late 2023
The site goes offline. The domain ends up parked, showing a “this domain is for sale” page for anyone who visits.
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2026
New, independent owners acquire the bare domain. No customer accounts, order history, or personal data came with it. The old services are permanently discontinued — this page is what replaces them.
Had an account or an unfilled order with the old Streamular? We are not the previous operators. Their systems and data were never transferred to us, so we cannot see, fulfill, or refund anything from that era. If you paid and never received an order, raise a dispute with whoever processed your original payment.
Does buying Twitch followers work? The honest answer
A bought follower is a number, not a viewer. Nearly everything that matters on Twitch — the Affiliate and Partner paths, where you appear in a category while live, what sponsors will pay — keys off people actually watching: concurrent viewers, watch time, an alive chat. A purchased follower never shows up to a stream.
- The number goes up. Nothing else does. Streams don't get more viewers, chat doesn't get faster, and revenue doesn't move, because none of those are driven by follower count.
- Every ratio gets worse. Five thousand followers with two average viewers reads as fake to anyone who looks — and sponsors, networks, and other streamers do look.
- Twitch prunes bots. The platform has run purges that removed bot follows at scale. Padded counts decay back toward the truth.
- It risks the channel. Fake engagement violates Twitch's Community Guidelines; view-botting in particular has led to suspensions.
This isn't theory to us. This domain sold these exact products for years — and the pattern in its own reviews was always the same: the count arrived on time, and nothing about the channel changed.
What about “free Twitch followers”?
The old Streamular's signature offer was free: an exchange where members followed each other to earn follows back, with paid tiers to speed it up. So take it from the domain that ran one — exchange follows are the same empty number, minus the invoice.
Those follows come from people farming follow-backs, not from anyone interested in your category. They don't watch, they frequently unfollow once you stop reciprocating, and bot-flagged accounts get purged. If a site offers free Twitch followers today, it works the same way — and accepting them puts you on the wrong side of the same fake-engagement rules.
Is any of this within Twitch's rules?
No — and that's the plainest reason this shop stays closed. Twitch's Community Guidelines prohibit fake engagement: artificially inflating follower counts, viewer counts, or other channel statistics, whether bought or botted. Every product the old Streamular sold sat on the wrong side of that line. The honest path is slower, but it's the only one that doesn't gamble the channel itself.
What actually grows a Twitch channel in 2026
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Stream on a schedule people can rely on.
Consistency is the strongest retention lever you control. A predictable two or three days a week beats random marathons, because returning viewers are what compound.
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Pick categories where you can actually be seen.
Category directories sort by viewers. In a mega-title you're forty pages deep; in a smaller or mid-size game, a channel with a handful of viewers is visible on the first screens.
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Treat your title, category, and tags like search results.
They're the only text a browsing viewer sees before clicking. Say what's actually happening on stream in words a stranger would search or scan for — not an in-joke.
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Be worth staying for in the first thirty seconds.
Talk even at zero viewers — lurkers arrive silently and judge fast. Clear audio matters more than a good camera; most viewers will forgive video long before they forgive sound.
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Let short-form do your discovery.
Twitch itself is weak at surfacing new channels. Clip your best moments and publish them on TikTok, Shorts, and Reels — that's where new viewers actually find streamers now.
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Grow with people, not at them.
Raids, collabs, and being a genuine regular in communities around your niche put you in front of real viewers who already like this kind of content.
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Give people somewhere to land between streams.
A Discord (or any home base) turns one-time viewers into regulars who show up when you go live — which lifts the concurrent-viewer numbers that everything else keys off.
And measure honestly: average concurrent viewers and returning viewers are the numbers that tell the truth. Follower count is the one number on Twitch you can fake — which is exactly why it's the least informative.
Frequently asked questions
Is Streamular legit?
It depends which Streamular you mean. The old Streamular (roughly 2019–2023) really did deliver follower and viewer packages — hundreds of reviews praised its delivery speed — but review sites and complaint boards also documented what was delivered: mostly bot or exchange accounts that never watched anyone's stream.
Today's Streamular is under new, independent ownership and sells nothing at all. There is nothing on this site to buy.
What happened to Streamular?
Archived captures show the follower shop operating from around 2019 until late 2023, when the site went offline. The domain then sat parked, showing a for-sale page. In 2026, new independent owners acquired the bare domain and relaunched it as an honest, no-sales page about Twitch growth. No customer accounts, orders, or personal data transferred to the new owners.
Can I still get free Twitch followers from Streamular?
No. The free-follower exchange and every paid package are permanently closed, and we will not relaunch them. Exchange follows come from people farming follow-backs, not from viewers of your content — they don't watch, they often unfollow, and Twitch purges bot follows.
Any site offering free Twitch followers today is handing out the same empty numbers, and accepting them runs against Twitch's fake-engagement rules.
Does buying Twitch followers actually work?
It changes one number and nothing else. Bought followers don't watch streams, so average concurrent viewers — the statistic that drives the Affiliate and Partner paths, category visibility, and sponsor decisions — stays exactly where it was. Meanwhile the follower-to-viewer ratio starts to look suspicious to anyone who checks, and Twitch's periodic bot purges claw the number back down.
Is buying Twitch followers or viewers against Twitch's rules?
Yes. Twitch's Community Guidelines prohibit fake engagement — artificially inflating follower counts, viewer counts, or other channel statistics, whether bought or botted. View-botting in particular has led to channel suspensions, and Twitch has run large purges that removed bot follows across the platform.
Do bought followers help you reach Twitch Affiliate?
They can inflate the follower requirement, but Affiliate also requires minutes broadcast, unique broadcast days, and an average of concurrent viewers over 30 days — and bought followers contribute nothing to the viewer average, which is the hard part. Faking the easy half of the checklist risks the account and earns none of the part that matters.
I had an account or an order on the old Streamular — where is it?
It did not come with the domain. The current owners acquired streamular.com after the old operation had already shut down; no accounts, order history, or personal data were transferred, so we cannot see, fulfill, or refund anything from that era. If you paid the old site and never received an order, raise a dispute with whoever processed your original payment.
What is Streamular now?
An independent, honestly-run site about growing on Twitch — starting with this page, which tells the brand's story straight. It sells no followers, viewers, views, likes, or engagement of any kind, and never will again. More honest resources for streamers are planned.
Streamular's next chapter
This page is deliberately simple: the brand's story, told straight, from the one domain that can tell it firsthand. Over time, Streamular will grow into an honest resource for streamers who care about real numbers. What it will never do again is sell engagement — of any kind, on any platform.