Faking Viewers on Twitch TV

Update: It appears that Twitch has capped views to ten per IP. While this method still works, you’ll need to supplement it with proxies or multiple IP’s. It’s still a good read though 🙂

An intro to Twitch:

Twitch is the largest video game broadcasting community. Most professional gamers live stream onto Twitch and almost every major eSporting event is broadcast through Twitch. There are hundreds of thousands of fans at any given time, all watching live streams.

Since there are hundreds of broadcasters simultaneously streaming, only the top broadcasters get featured on the first page of the channel browser. This position is determined by the number of live viewers watching the live stream. As you can see in the picture below, if you are not ranked in the top 7, you get put in the ominous “View All” button.

In most cases, only the well known broadcasters (usually pro-gamers with large fan bases) are featured on the front page, with all the others hidden away. Because of this, it is extremely hard for new streamers to get their content featured and get more fans. This is a huge catch-22, but according to Twitch, it’s the best way to ensure that only good content gets displayed.

Reverse Engineering Twitch’s View Counter

Although I do not personally play video games or broadcast on Twitch, I wanted to see if there was a way to fake the number of live viewers on a stream in order to be featured on the front page.

The first thing I tried was just to open a stream on different web browsers and private browsing/incognito. As it turns out, it worked. From that, I was fairly certain that views could be faked on a single computer.

The easy way to fake views would just be to make a program that opens a thousand tabs of the live stream, but that would be very resource intensive. Each page load is upwards of 3 MB and there’s the obvious problem of having a lot of live video streams playing at the same time. The bandwidth requirement would be too high.

The better way, of course, is to find out what mechanism keeps track of views. When a stream is loaded with Chrome dev tools open, I found queries to many hostnames, like mp.twitch.tv, usher.twitch.tv, api.twitch.tv, etc… To narrow down the results, I decided to block these hostnames one at a time to see if they were important. I ended up with a few required ones, namely usher.twitch.tv. Requests sent to this hostname returned “tokens”, which I assumed were session variables. Doing some quick Google searching reveals that usher.twitch.tv is used by many 3rd party programs to play Twitch broadcasts.

The program I ended up using is called livestreamer, which is a pip module used to launch streams in VLC player. What’s great about livestreamer is that it queries Twitch’s server and is able to return the result in json format. In this data is a URL that contains data about the video chunks of the live stream.

Faking viewers on Twitch

When a request is sent to the URL received from livestreamer, Twitch thinks a client is watching the live stream. With this in mind, I wrote a simple Python script that gets builds Twitch viewing tokens and queries using a HEAD request to mimic a viewer using the lowest amount of bandwidth possible.

In initial tests, I was only able to fake about ~100 users. But tweaking the number of concurrent threads yielded significant results.

To fake 1000 users using this script only took about 200 KB/sec – a ridiculously low amount of bandwidth. In fact, opening one live stream in the web browser would use more bandwidth than that. The bottleneck is now the CPU, rather than the network (cPython isn’t the most cpu efficient language).

Here are some results:

I decided to see the maximum number of viewers I could fake. I spun up the script on the best hardware I had, and here are the results:

Strangely enough, when there are thousands of fake viewers, the bottleneck actually switches back to the network from the CPU. This time, however, the issue isn’t bandwidth. It’s the number of requests that are being sent out. My guess is that my network throttled the number of packets per machine, and I simply couldn’t send enough requests out fast enough.

Conclusions

Being able to fake thousands of viewers on Twitch is definitely pretty cool, and if one were to do this, he would probably benefit.

A broadcaster can apply for a “partnership” with Twitch, which basically means that he can choose when to play video advertisements throughout his stream. This ad revenue is also shared with the broadcaster. Most large Twitch broadcasters are partners and some are earning estimated figures of $20,000 per year. A major requirement for being accepted as a partner for Twitch is to have a consistently high viewership. I’ve been told that having more than 500 live viewers is enough.

The issue with faking users is that it’s extremely obvious. Instantly gaining hundreds/thousands of viewers from one IP address is clearly going to raise some flags — if Twitch actually checks. I imagine it’s possible for Twitch to check, but does their backend keep track of everything? And for how long?

All in all, being able to fake viewers is definitely going to give a broadcaster a boost. A genuinely interesting broadcaster who doesn’t have a fan-base can instantly rise to stardom by faking views temporarily to bring his channel to the top of the rankings. Nothing too disruptive could happen with this Twitch bot. There are a few very competitive games, such as League of Legends, in which the top broadcaster usually has 50,000+ live viewers. Using a single fake viewer bot won’t make a dent, and it would probably require a few extra computers and a solid network to reach that level of fake viewers.

And for those who were wondering where this script I was talking about this whole time was, so here it is. It’s rather poorly commented but should be simple enough to follow along. You’ll need Python 2.x and the pip modules requests and livestreamer.

209 Comments
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Dan
10 years ago

I am not very good in Python.
Can any one write a step-by-step tutorial?
thx

HELPZz
10 years ago

Hey, Im pretty new at this I keep getting a error “Line 17” for “output” and says “expected an indented block” Someone please help.

Alexander
10 years ago

well, got everything working with proxie, can generate around 200-500 viewers, works flawless 🙂
nice work and thx for sharing

john
10 years ago
Reply to  Alexander

if you can make this into a simple program or be willing to help other people do this contact noobjohndoe@gmail.com

GAYTOR
10 years ago

Can you maybe add a proxy function? Because I have a big proxy file in the following format: xx.xxx.xxx.xx(ip):8080(port) per line

Would be nice^^

Alexander
10 years ago

Never mind, got it working completly,
but it cant generate more than 10 viewers from the same ip, i guess you would need a proxy, I have only basic knowledge about this and dont really know how to realize it, anyone can help?

Alexander
10 years ago

Hello all.
Got everything running smoothly, but i guess twitch removed some data from the json?
Im not sure i get errors becuase of this line :

return json.loads(output)[‘streams’][‘worst’][‘url’]

its allways keyerror:
either

Streams
worst
Url

so it seems like i get no data back at all?
I got all libraries as necessary and using python 2.7.6
anyone got an idea?
Xeroday, can you confirm whether this is still working or not?

regards

Bushi
10 years ago

Anyone can create tutorial on youtube ?

i dont understand how to use :/

Steve
10 years ago

Actually, I got it to work now..
Kind of?

The python code does not give me errors anymore, but it’s not increasing viewers. I typed in streamName 10 3 – so I wanted to test 10 viewer increase with 3 threads. It did not stop at 10, it went up to 50 before I manually stopped it.
The problem is the While True loop, it doesn’t have a break. it will continue forever.. right?

Anyway, anyone know why it isn’t increasing viewers?

iMaX
10 years ago
Reply to  Steve

Hi, i have problem

imax@sd-55670:~/Desktop$ python Twitch.py 10 10
File “Twitch.py”, line 19
return json.loads(output)[‘streams’][‘worst’][‘url’] # Parse json and return the URL parameter
^
IndentationError: unexpected indent

any idea?

DemTwitch
10 years ago
Reply to  iMaX

Remove Space before return json…. and you will be good to go

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