In the first half of 2025, Ukrainian-language broadcasts on Twitch generated over 63.1 million hours of views — bringing Ukrainian closer to the platform's top-10 languages by global standards. But the more interesting detail is hidden not in the overall figure, but in the geography: according to analytics platform Streams Charts, every fourth viewing hour occurs outside Ukraine.
Poland leads — and it's no coincidence
The largest share of foreign viewership falls to Poland — over 6.3% of all Ukrainian-language traffic on the platform. Streams Charts analysts directly link this to the Ukrainian diaspora that settled in the country after February 2022. Poland took in the largest wave of Ukrainian refugees in Europe — by various estimates, between 900,000 and over one million people as of 2024–2025.
This means that for part of this audience, Twitch performs the function that Ukrainian television once did: a linguistic and cultural connection to home. Not entertainment — but an environment.
What the rest of the map shows
After Poland, Germany, the USA, and the Czech Republic figure in the viewership geography — countries with a notable concentration of Ukrainians after 2022. This is not a random sample: it is essentially a map of forced emigration overlaid on a streaming platform.
- Poland — over 6.3% of foreign viewership, the largest concentration of Ukrainians in Europe
- Germany — second in the number of Ukrainian refugees accepted in the EU
- USA — longstanding and new Ukrainian diaspora, active in online spaces
- Czech Republic — disproportionately large Ukrainian community relative to the country's size
Streaming as a substitute for public space
For streamers, this statistic has practical implications: the audience is spread across time zones, and peak viewing hours in Poland or the Czech Republic do not coincide with Ukrainian ones. Some major Ukrainian streamers are already adapting their broadcast schedules to accommodate the "diaspora" prime time — late evening in Central European time.
"Ukrainian on Twitch is growing not because there are more streamers — but because the audience is seeking their native language where it doesn't surround them"
— the logic that Streams Charts analysts identify in their commentary on 2025 statistics
A separate nuance: the growth in the share of foreign viewership is occurring against the backdrop of overall platform growth — meaning the Ukrainian-language segment is growing faster than Twitch's average. This is a rare situation for a language of a country at war.
If the number of Ukrainians abroad is substantially reduced after the war ends — will Ukrainian-language Twitch maintain its top-10 position, or was the foreign audience the main growth driver that will disappear along with people's return home?