From YouTube Millions to Kick's Spotlight: How a Spanish Gaming Phenom is Redefining Multi-Platform Streaming
# From YouTube Giant to Kick's Rising Star: The Nexxuz Story
If you've spent any time in the Spanish gaming community, you've likely stumbled across Nexxuz. Born Sergio Moles Montes, this 36-year-old Spaniard has quietly built one of Spain's most impressive digital empires, recently making waves with his move to Kick.com after dominating YouTube for years.
What's fascinating about Nexxuz's journey is how he's mastered multiple platforms without losing his authentic voice. While many creators struggle to maintain consistency across platforms, Nexxuz has cultivated a loyal following of 4.51 million YouTube subscribers alongside his growing Kick audience. His content centers around immersive gameplay sessions of titles like GTA V, ARK: Survival Ascended, and Elden Ring—games where he doesn't just play, but creates entire narratives that keep viewers hooked for hours. I remember watching one of his ARK streams last spring where he spent three hours meticulously building a dinosaur sanctuary, complete with custom commentary that made virtual paleontology feel genuinely exciting.
Unlike many streamers who treat platforms as interchangeable, Nexxuz has adapted his approach to each community's preferences. On Kick, where he's gained over 13,000 new followers in just 30 days, he's embraced longer, more interactive sessions—averaging nearly 90 hours of streaming monthly with an impressive 16,216 average viewers. His Spanish-speaking audience particularly loves how he seamlessly blends gaming with cultural references that resonate locally, whether he's joking about regional stereotypes during a GTA session or incorporating Spanish memes into his Elden Ring commentary. There's something refreshingly genuine about how he'll pause mid-gameplay to explain a cultural nuance for international viewers, making everyone feel included.
What really sets Nexxuz apart is his streaming discipline. While many creators post sporadically, he maintains a rigorous schedule that would exhaust most mortals—streaming nearly daily from 7-11 PM CET, with extended weekend sessions that sometimes run past midnight. This consistency has paid off; his Kick channel recently hit a peak of 38,610 viewers during an October stream that featured an unexpected guest appearance from fellow Spanish creator Spursito. Watching his streams, you get the sense he genuinely enjoys the interaction—responding to chat comments with personalized shoutouts rather than generic acknowledgments.
Nexxuz's move to Kick represents more than just another platform switch—it's part of a broader trend of Spanish-speaking creators finding a home on the platform. What's impressive is how he's managed this transition without alienating his massive YouTube base, continuing to post highlights while building something new on Kick. For viewers, it means double the content without the usual "choose a side" drama that often accompanies platform migrations. Whether he's surviving the apocalypse in 7 Days to Die or navigating the streets of Los Santos, Nexxuz has proven that authentic connection matters more than which platform you're using—it's about showing up consistently and bringing your real self to every stream.