Top 5 Toxic Russian Streamers 2026
You might think toxicity is when a streamer calls a viewer names in chat. No. Toxicity is when a streamer doesn't care about anyone, including those who bring them money.
In 2026, Russian streaming finally split into two camps. The first builds communities, cares for viewers, and earns millions. The second spits on everyone, burns bridges, and gains views through scandals.
This rating isn't about talent. It's about character. About people who turned hatred into a profession.
Attention: All characters on this list are real. All situations are documented on streams, in leaks, or official statements.
Rating Methodology (how we calculated)
Five criteria for toxicity.
Criterion 1. Frequency of direct insults to viewers.
Criterion 2. Conflicts with other streamers (public, prolonged).
Criterion 3. Number of bans on platforms.
Criterion 4. Attitude towards chat moderation (or lack thereof).
Criterion 5. Off-stream scandals (personal life, fights, lawsuits).
Maximum of 10 points for each criterion. Total rating from 0 to 50.
Top 5 Most Toxic Russian Streamers 2026
5th place: Evelone
Toxicity: 32 out of 50
Why she's on the list. Evelone isn't the angriest. She's the most unpredictable. In an hour-long stream, she can cry twice, insult viewers three times, and go AFK for 20 minutes without explanation once.
Main poison. Playing on emotions. Evelone has created a cult around her instability. Viewers watch not for the content, but for the "what will happen next minute" series.
Catchphrase of 2026: "You've driven me crazy, I'm going to shut everything down and leave forever."
How many times she promised to leave: 12. How many times she left: 0.
Conflicts. Her quarrel with Buster made their fans fight for weeks. Result: both streamers lost 10 percent of their audience but gained hype.
Verdict. Toxicity as theater. Viewers know they'll be insulted, but they still come. A magic no one can explain.
4th place: Buster
Toxicity: 38 out of 50
Why he's on the list. Buster isn't just toxic. He's conservatively toxic. He's been using the same insults for five years. It's his brand.
Main poison. Aggression without reason. While Evelone insults in response to provocation, Buster can explode out of nowhere. Lost a game — chat's fault. Program crashed — viewers' fault.
Catchphrase of 2026: "You idiots don't understand anything about this game."
How many times banned on Twitch: 3 temporary bans. No permanent ones. Buster knows how to walk the line without crossing it.
Conflicts. The war with Evelone was the event of the year. Two weeks of mutual insults, compilations, analysis streams. Result: they made up live, gathering 150 thousand viewers for a joint broadcast.
Verdict. A toxic professional. He knows what he's doing. Every insult is calculated. It's not a meltdown; it's work.
3rd place: Melstroy
Toxicity: 42 out of 50
Why he's on the list. Melstroy is the father of Russian toxicity. He started insulting viewers before it became mainstream. In 2026, he's not the angriest, but he's the most experienced.
Main poison. Cold contempt. Other streamers yell. Melstroy speaks quietly, slowly, and with such an intonation that you want to close the stream and reflect on life.
Catchphrase of 2026: "Well, you plebs, did you donate? Good for you. Now piss off."
How many times blocked on YouTube: 2 channels. Both restored. Viewers say Melstroy has nine lives.
Why he's toxic in 2026. He hasn't changed. That's the main problem. In an industry where everyone has become more polite, Melstroy remains the same. Some like it. Most don't anymore.
Verdict. A dinosaur of toxicity. His time is running out. But he's still in the top because old fans don't leave.
2nd place: Velikiy Bomzh (Vova)
Toxicity: 47 out of 50
Why he's on the list. Vova doesn't insult viewers. Vova insults reality. His streams are a stream of consciousness where hatred is poured over everything: games, platforms, other streamers, the weather, food.
Main poison. Paranoid toxicity. Vova is convinced there's a conspiracy against him. Chat? Bots from competitors. Game lag? Organized attack. Noisy neighbors? They were sent after him.
Catchphrase of 2026: "You're all bought, I'm the only honest one here."
How many times he complained about conspiracies: approximately 300 times a year. No evidence.
Main scandal of 2026. Vova accused another top streamer of stealing his audience. He organized an analysis stream for 200,000 viewers. In the end, he proved nothing, but his rating grew.
Verdict. Toxicity as an illness. Vova isn't playing a role. He genuinely believes it. It's both scary and funny at the same time.
1st place: Toxicoz
Toxicity: 49 out of 50
Why he's on the list. Because his nickname speaks for itself. Toxicoz is the only streamer who made hatred his legal name. His passport name is different, by the way. But everyone calls him that.
Main poison. Systemic destruction. Other streamers insult in the moment. Toxicoz insults for the long run. He can remember the nickname of a viewer who wrote something nasty three months ago and insult them in front of everyone. He has a list. He maintains it.
Catchphrase of 2026: "Remember this day. You just made an enemy for life. I have 400,000 subscribers. You won't hide."
How many times banned: 5 times. Four times on Twitch, once on YouTube. Each time he returned with even greater aggression.
Main scandal of 2026. Toxicoz drove a novice streamer to quit streaming. He trolled her for two months. She left. He said, "It's her own fault." He lost contracts with two advertisers. Viewers didn't care.
Why he's number one. Because others are toxic in a game. Toxicoz is toxic in life. The difference is colossal.
Verdict. The absolute evil of Russian streaming. An unpleasant person who turned unpleasantness into millions.
Bonus: Why Viewers Watch This
You might ask why watch these people at all?
The answer is simple and uncomfortable. Toxicity is escapism. The viewer comes to the stream to see someone meaner than themselves. To say, "I'm not so bad; look at how bad others are." It's cheap therapy at the expense of someone else's aggression.
Streamers know this. That's why they don't change. As long as you watch their scandals with horror and admiration, they will earn money.
Stop watching. They will disappear. But you won't stop.
Honest Conclusion
This rating isn't about who to hate. It's about who turned hate into a business model. And they succeeded.
Everyone chooses their own moral. You can condemn. You can admire their resilience. You can just turn off the stream and go for a walk.
But the fact remains. In 2026, these five people attract more viewers than most kind and positive streamers combined.
And that's not a problem for the streamers. It's a problem for us.
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