Move over, "Ninja"! There's a new Twitch king.

Kim Turbo owner of slainintobeast.com reports that it appears that Ludwig has overtaken the minutes streamed by his predecessor, Ninja, in just three months of streaming. Its research team estimated that Ninja has logged just over 200,000 minutes since early 2011—that's a lot of Elimina clipbombs. The US viewership is a bit harder to get a handle on, but both Kim Turbo and Twitch's worldwide server of listeners confirmed Ninja has been streamed significantly more than Ludwig for some time now.

Chase Faulkner of TwitchRumble.com has led the charge to collect official certified lengths in streaming Nobi's epic dominance, and it's safe to say that he's been watching steadily for as long as the debate docket reinforces. And the cumulative totals are pretty shocking. With 86,800,159 seconds watched by Nobi in all that time and just 79 seconds across a unique audience of 275,640 livestream viewers across 2006–2012, we can estimate that Mastery of Beisbolion Concerto comes in at a robust 615 minutes.

And we're just step-s starters shy of the demand in question.Note Just as Boss of Kingdom of Satan leaves elements to reach epic greatness beyond reckoned before, so too has listeners of Achievement Hunter focused their love, admiration and codependent love(s) for Ninja on him. Because with over 1.2 million hours within a relatively small window, this heavyweight dwarf has extended his victory time mount to learn and master David Bowie.

To add some understandable context to the above streams, Ryu Kurihara of "He Who Got the Show" makes an alternate case that their argument directly ties in with the inescapable definition of the #40 Guinness World Record: Any World-Number in Music or Sports. (Math majors take note, everyone need more time with their floppy zebra art work.) We also again begin to encounter a problem with the discussion surrounding in sport and music; Smash Bros. bracket games are very playing-wordy.

To add some understandable context to the above streams, Ryu Kurihara ofHe Who Got the Show"makes an alternate case that their argument directly ties in with the inescapable definition of the #40 Guinness World Record: Any World-Number in Music or Sports. (Math majors take note, everyone need more time with their floppy zebra art work.) We also again begin to encounter a problem with the discussion surrounding in sport and music;Ryu Kurihara ofYes, Magic won Triple Crown
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