Ludwig's historic 31-day subathon stream: final numbers
Ludwig subathon stream ends
Image via Twitch Ludwig stream

Ludwig’s historic 31-day subathon stream: final numbers

Ludwig Ahgren’s historic Twitch subathon finally came to an end on April 13. The stream totaled 31 days of broadcasting on the platform. Ahgren started his stream on the afternoon of Sunday, March 14 with the plan to add 20 seconds to his stream timer for every subscription or 500 bits given to his channel. As the stream went on… and on, the time that was added per subscription went down to 10 seconds. However, the stream persisted until Ahgren’s self-imposed 31-day limit, ending after over 740 hours. In its time on the air, the Ludwig subathon stream numbers, calculated by his community, are historic.

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According to the unofficial stream statistic website TwitchTracker, Ahgren is the No. 1 subscribed broadcaster on the platform for the months of March and April, with over 280,000 subscribers. The content creator broke the previous subscription record set by Tyler “Ninja” Blevins; 269,154 subscribers earned back in April of 2018.

The Ludwig subathon’s final numbers

The Arizona native has earned around seven figures over the course of the broadcast and has pledged $1 from every subscription to charity, increasing that number to $5 in the final hours. Additionally, he is doling out $5,000 a day to his moderators, which is split between the 17 individuals. Also, Ahgren will hand over a large percentage of his gross income from the stream to Twitch and California state taxes.

The streamer gained over $1 million after 556 hours or about 23 days, with $41,850 as his highest earnings in 30 minutes according to his community’s subathon spreadsheet. The total money from his subscribers over the month-long stream came out to around $1,300,000. The stream peaked at over 72 hours on the timer, at 130 hours in. But, the timer got as low as 1 second just days before the stream ended.

The stream almost ended on April 10 as the timer went down to just one second and the streamer stepped away for a moment. The Twitch user Demon Dog saved the stream by gifting 10 subscribers to the channel, increasing the timer to just under two minutes.

The timer would remain below 24 hours after the 280 hours streamed mark, or about 11 days in.

On his seemingly never-ending stream, Ahgren cooked, slept, worked out and, of course, played video games. In his California home, where he lives with his five roommates and girlfriend, he streamed his life to around 43,000 viewers on average. As a result, while he slept, his moderators took over the broadcast. They hopped into a Discord call together while Ahgren laid unconscious in his red race car bed. The team played party games or watched videos together while encouraging viewers to subscribe to the channel.

On some days, Ahgren would awake to a longer timer and more subscribers than when he fell asleep.

Ludwig breaking the mold

As the stream continued, many mainstream outlets took notice of the historic Twitch event and even documented the phenomenon. While Ahgren will walk away with only a fraction of the subscription profits, the attention from contemporary media outlets and follower count is enough for him.

“At the end of the day, the total follower gain is just so big. We’ve actually had a New York Times article on this!” Ahgren exclaimed. “That’s insane. It’s nuts. All that is invaluable, I think. Spending $150k to get a Times article and all these followers, I’m fine with that.”

The stream ended at 9 p.m Pacific Standard Time with a final tally of 282,191 subscribers and a tearful salute to the viewers that brought him to this historic benchmark.

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Author
Declan McLaughlin
Declan is an esports journalist and part-time editor for Upcomer. He is an avid gamer and League of Legends player. You can find him at the bottom of the leaderboard in most games or on Twitter.