---
title: 'How Much Twitch Streamer Clip Creators Earn'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=1Ct5nScSEBQ'
video_id: '1Ct5nScSEBQ'
date: 2026-07-15
duration_sec: 340
---

# How Much Twitch Streamer Clip Creators Earn

> Source: [How Much Twitch Streamer Clip Creators Earn](https://youtube.com/watch?v=1Ct5nScSEBQ)

## Summary

This video explores the world of Twitch clip creators, detailing the different types of cuts, their earnings, and the creator's personal experiences. It provides an insider's look at the challenges and economics of making content from streamers' broadcasts.

### Key Points

- **Three Types of Cuts** [00:15] — The creator divides cuts into three types: TikTok compilations (dynamic, up to a minute), full horizontal YouTube videos (reactions or gameplay with minimal editing), and straight cutting (compressing the best parts of a long stream).
- **Time Investment for Beginners** [01:06] — Cutters spend an average of 3-4 hours per day cutting. Beginners face a race to release cuts first, especially when big streamers post cuts an hour or a day after the stream.
- **Earnings of Cutters** [01:19] — Income varies greatly. Small channels like 'Fispekta Cuts' earn about 15,000 rubles per month from monetization and affiliate links. Large brands can earn millions; for example, Dipens's cut earned over a million rubles per month, and Kubrick's cut earned from 300,000.
- **Creator's Personal Experience** [02:00] — The creator earned 120,000 rubles from Ivan Kurapov's TikTok contest last summer. Later, they cut for Tohu 2X2, but a strike from a TV channel halted a successful video. Other attempts included cutting Minecraft and a newbie streamer, but they stopped due to lack of interest or the streamer quitting.
- **Future of Cutting** [04:26] — The creator predicts a shift towards long-form videos as YouTube promotes podcasts. People may be tired of hyper-dynamic formats. Networks that cut videos for you exist but work poorly. TikTok compilations may decline, but top-10 funniest moments format might persist.

### Conclusion

The cutting industry is lucrative for top creators but highly competitive and time-consuming. The creator advises against giving up, as persistence is key to success.

## Transcript

asking them to tell me their monthly income. And, honestly, I'm culturally shocked by these work, how it all works from the inside, and what life is like for a Twitch director in general.  Well, let's go.  Well, first of all, I want to understand what
you mean by cuts, because I divide them into three types.  The first type we include is TikTok compilations. It could be a story, a funny clip, or the streamer's opinion on something.  Well, they all last up
to a minute, and usually they try to make them as dynamic as possible, and also usually maintain the dynamics.  The second type I include is a full-fledged horizontal video on YouTube.  It could be a reaction or a passage of some game.  There is
usually almost no editing there.  There is some kind of packing of mats and outracintro.  Well, in the third type I include straight cutting-cutting.  This is when they take the most interesting parts from a large stream and compress them really well.  Or just some kind of
collection of funny clips.  I asked the cutters how much came to the conclusion that on average they spend 3-4 hours per day cutting.  And it's quite difficult for beginner cutters, especially when the big ones have
when they post the cut, an hour after the stream or a day later, but beginner cutters have to organize a kind of race to see who will release it first.  Probably one of the most interesting parts of this video: how much
do the nareshchiki earn?  The income in them varies greatly, and it is necessary to take into account the sources of income.  This could be advertising, monetization, or even the streamer himself could pay the cutters.  So, let's say the channel "Fispekta Cuts"
earns about 15,000 rubles per month. on monetization, as well as VPN links to AliExpress.  Links earns the same amount , but large brands can earn gigantic sums of money.  This came to light from Dipens's conflict with his
cut.  The income per cut was from a million rubles per month.  Holy [ __ ].  The narezkinta channel earns from half a million to a million per month.  Kubrick with cutting from 300,000. doing something wrong with my life.  Well, now I would like to
tell you about my experience in cutting. I had a lot of attempts, but let me tell you about the most successful ones.  Last summer, Ivan Kurapov launched a TikTok contest for video clips, and he was paying a pretty penny for them
take off and started getting gigantic thought that I was twisting, although this was not the case.  But in the summer I received about 120,000 rubles from Kurappov.  Here is a screenshot of the largest translation.  But then,
less and less traffic.  And Vanya himself began to run out of money, so he began to pay less.  At this point I stop cutting it.  The next time I started making cuts happened relatively recently, namely in February of
this year.  Yo!  I decided to cut the biggest streamer on Twitch, namely Tohu 2X2.  and already made long cuts for the YouTube channel.  This time I didn't do them our responsibilities so that he would make cuts and I would preview for them.  By the way, to
the surprise and delight of the cutters, many work according to the same scheme.  But not in the sense that they are also with their brother, but together. Our first videos are starting to get some good views.  The most successful of them gain around 2,000.  But further on,
unfortunately, we can expect a decline in views. Watching this, the desire to continue diminishes a little, but another missed cut saves it.  This was Tokita 2X2's reaction to pregnancy at 16, and she gains about 6,000 a day.  But a
couple of days later, during a rough takeoff, the TV channel that had the program issued a strike, and so the video stopped showing.  Because of this, my brother and I get a little bit of a buzz, we release a couple more videos, but they get
less and less views.  This is where the story of this channel ends.  By the way, continued working on the channel. Maybe we have achieved some success now, but apparently it was not meant to be. My other attempts included
filming Minecraft on the channel.  Already long cuts of Ivan Kurapov.  A couple of them even got some decent views for a new channel.  But it turned out that I don’t like Ivan Krapov himself as a streamer, so I stopped streaming him.  I
featured a newbie streamer, Lil Cheetos, but unfortunately he stopped streaming and that's why the channel died.  Yes, I even made my own cuts.  And I want to scold myself about them.  I hope you don't mind.  I have them, but Name's got
pretty good views, but who knows why.  I just stopped stopped then, I would be a media giant now.  Who the hell knows. Honestly, I’ve noticed a tendency that in all my endeavors, for some reason, I end up
giving up.  Please don't repeat my mistakes.  Well, now I would like to express my vision of the future of otvinochnaya razok as a format.  Now I'm going to express a rather unpopular opinion, but I
think they will move towards long videos.  This is indicated at the very least by the fact that YouTube itself has recently begun to promote podcasts more. There is a feeling that people are tired of the
mega-dynamic, hackneyed format, and they want something more lively. Maybe there will be networks that will cut videos for you.  There are already a couple of them, but believe me, they work very poorly so far.  As for TikTok
compilations, it's more difficult for me to predict their future .  TikTok not long ago these video ketches were popular, but now they have almost stopped being made.  The only thing is that I myself believe in the format of the top 10 funniest moments of a streamer.   I
sometimes like to stare at them myself.  But if you watched the video up to this point, then I'd like to subscribe to my Telegram channel.  There I post all the news about videos, streams, and just content.  Let's say
and then went around posting them all over the city.  Well, don't sleep.  Well, okay, city.  Well, don't sleep.  Well, okay, I'm not saying goodbye to you, I'll see you soon.
