YouTuber and former Twitch streamer Valkyrae has a message for all her colleagues on Amazon's beleaguered streaming service: come to YouTube. "It's nice."

Valkyrae made the open invitation in during a recent stream where she looked at twitchearnings.com, a site that listed Twitch's top earners according to the recent data breach (and has since been taken down). To Valkyrae's surprise, she actually made the top 100 with $96,025.90 earned between August 2019 and January 2020 when she left Twitch for YouTube.

But the fact that her earnings were public information at all was a bit of a downer, so after looking at the leaked info she pitched Twitch streamers everywhere on making the move to YouTube.

“You know, YouTube is looking to sign more streamers," Valkyrae casually mentioned. “The streaming side of the platform has a lot of room to grow. They’re working on and focusing on it. I’m happy here and seeing how hungry they are is exciting.

Related: Ludwig Says More Streamers Will Leave Twitch For YouTube

“I’m not biased or whatever, but YouTube doesn’t have ads, and we’re currently working on a lot of other things. Plus, right now, we haven’t gotten breached and had all of our code leaked. I don’t know, it all sounds kind of scary over there. I like my island over here. It’s really nice."

Earlier this week, Twitch suffered perhaps the largest data breach in history with over 125 GB of internal data stolen, including Twitch's source code and payment information for its top streamers. Twitch is still investigating the breach, but so far believes it to be the result of a "server configuration change" that provided access to "a malicious third party."

No credit card info or login credentials were exposed, according to the streaming service, but Twitch is still asking everyone to reset their passwords just in case.

Valkyrae isn't the only former Twitch streamer that's made the jump to YouTube. DrLupo signed an exclusive deal at the end of August, with TimTheTatman following suit not a day later. Considering the breach, there are certainly more Twitch streamers that are wondering if perhaps they’ll be safer in YouTube’s hands than Twitch’s.

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