Competitive FPS streamer | Battlefield specialist

I treat everything in life like a tactical shooter: assess the terrain, identify the objective, and execute with the most efficient strategy. When I decided to start streaming Battlefield 6, one month ago, I looked at the “Just Chatting” and “FPS” categories and saw a graveyard.

There are thousands of talented players with 0 viewers. I knew my aim was top-tier, and my commentary was educational, but on Twitch, skill doesn’t equal discovery. The algorithm is a gatekeeper. If you have 0 viewers, you are invisible.

I didn’t want a hobby, I wanted an online business. And every startup needs seed capital. That’s why I invested in Viewbots.com.

The Objective: Breaking the FPS Ceiling

First-Person Shooter is arguably the toughest genre to break into. You’re competing with pros and esports celebrities. I knew that if I launched my channel with 2 viewers, I would drown.

I had to be in the top 3 rows of the directory from Day 1 to capture the Battlefield 6 launch hype. I researched “growth services” and ignored the cheap bot farms. I needed real engagement, not just inflated numbers, because FPS fans can smell a fake community from a mile away.

I chose the Viewbots Partner Prodigy package because I was interested in its Aurora AI technology. I needed an AI that could distinguish between a “cozy gamer”-basically, a person who wouldn’t like my content-and a “competitive shooter fan.” Aurora AI promised to route the latter to my stream.

The Execution: 6 Months to Success

Months 1-2: The Foundation-The Sentinel Phase

I started streaming 4 days a week, 6 hours a session. I used Viewbots to keep a baseline of 150-200 viewers.

This was the protection phase known as “Sentinel.” It kept my account safe while still boosting me enough to get Affiliate status in just 10 days.

Result: I wasn’t buried. When people browsed “New Shooters,” I was visible. Real people started clicking.

Months 3-4: The Launch Surge (Aurora AI Optimization)

When Battlefield 6 popularity spiked, I increased my investment in Viewbots, targeting 800-1,000 viewers. That was where the business model clicked.

Organic traffic started pouring in because I was now ranking in the top 10 of the Battlefield directory. Aurora AI was aggressively pushing my stream to people who watch content similar to Call of Duty and Apex Legends.

The “Real” Proof: My chat wasn’t spam. It was tactical. “Why are you using that loadout?” “Nice snipe!” “Can I join your squad?” Bots don’t ask to join your squad. Real players do.

Months 5-6: Stabilization and Revenue

Today, six months later, I have stabilized.

Followers: 7,612

Avg. Live Viewers: 1,300 – 1,700

Schedule: 4 days/week (Thursday-Sunday).

The Financials: Treating Twitch as a Business

This is the part most people are afraid to talk about: the ROI, or Return on Investment. Viewbots was my marketing expense, but the revenue comes from the real audience that the software helped me acquire.

As of this month, with an average of ~1,500 concurrent viewers, here’s a breakdown of my monthly income:

Ad Revenue (The Heavy Hitter)

Running 3 minutes of ads per hour with 1,500 viewers is lucrative. Since my audience is “Gamers” – a high-value demographic for advertisers – my CPM is high.

Calculation: ~1,500 viewers × 4 days/week × 6 hours.

Monthly Ad Revenue: ~$2,100

Subscriptions – Tier 1 & Prime

I have approximately 450 subscribers now. The ratio is realistic for 1.5k viewers- many are just lurkers.

Calculation: 450 subs x ~$2.50 (my cut after taxes/Twitch split).

Monthly Sub Revenue: ~$1,125

Bounties & Sponsorships:

Because my metrics show “High Engagement”, thanks to the real chat activity driven by Aurora AI, I qualify for Twitch’s Bounty Board and external sponsorships, such as energy drinks and VPNs.

Monthly Sponsorship Revenue: ~$1,200 – $1,500

Total Monthly Revenue: ~$4,400 – $4,725

The Verdict

I’m now creating more than $4,000 per month working 4 days a week on my stream.

Without Viewbots, I’d probably still be sitting at 15 viewers, making $0. The Partner Prodigy package didn’t “fake” my success; it accelerated it. It put my gameplay in front of the right eyeballs.

The 1,500 people watching me tonight aren’t bots. They’re real squadmates, real subscribers, and real fans clipping my headshots and posting them on Reddit. Viewbots gave the intro, I supplied the content.

If you want to make gaming your career, stop wishing for good luck. Invest in the tech that gets you discovered.

Current Status:

Followers: 7,612 

Avg Viewers: 1,500+ 

Business Health: Profitable and Scaling.