Nicholas "Jynxzi" Stewart just announced his next streaming targets: League of Legends and Apex Legends. If you follow internet attention like it was a weather pattern, his storms have been reliably intense, so both games should probably clear their schedules.

Why people care when Jynxzi moves

Jynxzi is not a one-game streamer. In 2026 he helped bring players back to Clash Royale, organized a massive Counter-Strike 2 streamer event, and has already started a push into VALORANT. When he says he will grind a title, the community listens.

Notable recent hits

  • Clash Royale: Streams correlated with a clear uptick in returning players and new signups. He publicly criticized the game maker for not crediting his contribution in their year recap, and other big creators have said they tried the game because of his streams.
  • Counter-Strike 2: On March 15 he ran a 4v4 streamer tournament with more than 20 creators, including well-known names from the streaming scene. The event aired across 45 channels and peaked near 481,000 concurrent viewers, landing it among the top five most-watched CS2 events of 2026 at the time.
  • He hit a platform snag when his Steam account received a 72-hour cooldown after a friend sent a gift card to bypass a $2,000 daily spending limit. The attempt triggered fraud detection during a live session.

VALORANT is already heating up

After the CS2 event Jynxzi jumped into VALORANT. He began training with Tyson "TenZ" Ngo and his VALORANT debut stream peaked around 81,000 viewers. His first Ace made waves across the scene. He also confirmed a VALORANT streamer tournament scheduled for March 29, and the announcement drew thousands of replies with several notable creators expressing interest.

League of Legends and Apex Legends: the next grind

Jynxzi named League of Legends and Apex Legends as the games he plans to grind next. He described Apex as "in the gutter right now," a view that echoes complaints from portions of its player base about matchmaking and content cadence. About League he said, "I gotta play League of Legends before I d*e, it looks like the highest skill gap game ever."

Community reaction is mixed but curious. Some observers welcomed the idea of him trying Apex, though they also warned that streamsniping could make the experience frustrating. Given his track record of drawing large audiences and moving player numbers, neither Riot nor Respawn should ignore the potential impact.

What to watch for

  • Will streams of League and Apex translate into measurable player spikes like his previous pushes?
  • Can he avoid or manage streamsniping in a battle royale setting?
  • How big will the viewership be, compared to his CS2 and VALORANT numbers?

Jynxzi has proven he can move audiences across multiple games. Whether he can nudge League of Legends or pull Apex Legends out of a slump remains to be seen, but it will be entertaining to watch him try.