On April 26, Riot Games announced that 30 streamers will be able to co-stream the upcoming Mid-Season Invitational 2023, though a lack of details on who these streamers are has left fans concerned.<\/p>
The news quickly made it to Reddit<\/a>, where some fans voiced their excitement since they enjoy League of Legends<\/em> streamers like IWDominate and their knowledge. Other fans, however, quickly shut down their hopes, claiming the streamers allowed to co-stream MSI 2023<\/a> are non-League<\/em> ones, like Sykkuno.<\/p>
Many people claim this move from Riot isn’t meant to improve the experience for League<\/em> fans by allowing their favorite League<\/a><\/em> creators to co-stream, but to bring a new audience to the event. With streamers like Sykkuno, who is rumored to co-stream, MSI 2023 would reach people who don’t usually follow League’s<\/em> esports. <\/p>
Related: Here are the early LoL<\/em> Patch 13.9 patch notes<\/a> <\/strong><\/p>
If that were true, it wouldn’t be the first time that Riot allowed non-League<\/em><\/a> content creators to co-stream its biggest events. Only a few like Sykkuno and Ibai were allowed to do so for Worlds 2022 finals, which was met with backlash from the community<\/a>. Many fans complained about League<\/em> streamers not getting access to co-stream even though they’ve been grinding as much as they could.<\/p>
We’ve yet to see the list of invited co-streamers for MSI 2023<\/a>, and we’re likely to see it in the coming days since the event begins on May 2.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"