Let's plays, challenges, horror games, Minecraft legends and some of the biggest names in YouTube gaming history.
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PewDiePie
111M+ SubsVariety GamingCommentaryLegend
Felix Kjellberg is one of the defining figures of YouTube gaming. He held the title of most-subscribed channel on the entire platform for years, and his journey from horror game screams to Minecraft series to philosophical commentary has tracked the evolution of YouTube itself. His influence on internet culture over more than a decade is hard to overstate โ he essentially helped define what a gaming YouTuber could be.
Worth knowing
PewDiePie has had genuine controversies over the years, including incidents involving slurs and associations with far-right content โ issues he has publicly addressed and apologised for. His more recent content is considerably more relaxed and self-reflective. Worth knowing the history if you are recommending the channel to others.
Mark Fischbach built his reputation on horror gaming โ his genuine reactions, infectious laugh and emotional investment made Let's Plays feel more like performance than commentary. His Five Nights at Freddy's series helped launch that franchise into mainstream awareness, and his interactive films like A Heist with Markiplier show a creator who has consistently pushed the format forward. He is also one of the more active charity fundraisers on YouTube, having raised millions for various causes over his career.
Sean McLoughlin is one of the most energetic gaming creators on YouTube and also one of the most consistently well-regarded in terms of how he treats his audience and community. His commentary is loud and enthusiastic โ not for everyone โ but the warmth underneath it is genuine. He has raised substantial sums for charity over the years and has been open about mental health struggles, which has built him a particularly loyal following.
Evan Fong built VanossGaming on squad gaming montages โ tightly edited compilations of chaotic GTA V sessions, Garry's Mod games and Call of Duty moments with a rotating cast of friends. The format suits YouTube extremely well: short bursts of comedic chaos, no filler. His editing and comic timing are notably sharp, and the chemistry between him and his regular crew gives the videos a consistent energy that kept him at 25 million subscribers for years.
Dan Middleton is one of the UK's longest-standing gaming YouTubers and has been a consistent presence in the family-friendly gaming space for over a decade. His Minecraft series introduced an enormous number of younger viewers to both the game and the format, and his ability to stay relevant across changing trends โ from Minecraft to Roblox to variety content โ speaks to how well he understands his audience.
MrBeast Gaming takes popular game formats and scales them into real-world spectacles โ massive prize pools, elaborate physical recreations and extreme endurance challenges. The Squid Game recreation, which had 456 real participants competing for $456,000, became one of the most-watched videos on all of YouTube. The channel is less about gaming skill and more about the entertainment value of high-stakes competition, which is a format MrBeast has refined better than anyone else on the platform.
Dream rose to become one of the fastest-growing YouTubers in history on the back of his Minecraft Manhunt series โ a format where he attempts to beat the game while being actively hunted by friends. The tension and unpredictability of each episode made it genuinely compelling viewing. His Dream SMP server created one of the largest and most dedicated gaming communities YouTube has seen, built around an ongoing fictional narrative with dozens of creator-characters.
Worth knowing
Dream was at the centre of a significant speedrun cheating controversy in 2020, in which statistical analysis suggested his record runs were statistically implausible. He initially disputed the findings but later admitted to inadvertently using a modified game client. The controversy divided his community and is worth knowing about as context for his channel's history.
Tyler Blevins became the most recognisable face in gaming during the peak of Fortnite's popularity โ his record-breaking stream with Drake in 2018 pulled 635,000 concurrent viewers and made mainstream news worldwide. He was the first gaming creator to appear on the cover of ESPN Magazine and secured an exclusive deal with Mixer before that platform shut down. His YouTube channel captures highlights from a career that genuinely crossed gaming into pop culture in a way few have managed.
Worth knowing
Ninja's peak activity was closely tied to Fortnite's peak popularity, and his output and viewership has declined significantly since. The channel is more of a highlight archive than an active presence. Worth visiting for the history rather than expecting current, regular content at the same scale.
Ian Stapleton has been making family-friendly gaming content on YouTube for well over a decade and has remained consistently popular with younger audiences throughout. His Among Us mod series โ where he introduces increasingly elaborate custom roles and mechanics โ became some of the most-watched gaming content on the platform during the height of Among Us's popularity. Reliably clean, energetic content that parents do not need to screen before letting kids watch.
Lannan Eacott built LazarBeam on a very specific kind of gaming comedy โ finding the most absurd, rule-breaking ways to play Fortnite and documenting them with maximum energy and self-deprecation. Winning Fortnite using only emotes, building the worst possible loadout, reacting to other people's chaotic gaming moments โ the channel is essentially a celebration of playing games badly on purpose. Australian humour and unhinged delivery make it genuinely funny rather than just loud.