>>107801104Essentially, there are two ways you can viewbot on Twitch. You can use services that do all the work for you, or you can set it up yourself.
>Botting ServicesThese are pay and go. Just pay them, set the number of viewers and duration, and it'll work. How do I know? I tested it today. I used a free trial of 50 viewers for an hour, and it did exactly that. So I would imagine the paid version would work too.
https://twitchtracker.com/lyra/streams/315918319320As you can see in the image, 100 viewers for 5 hours cost 7 Euros (8 USD). So, imagine somebody using 5000 viewbots, it would cost them 410 USD for 5 hours. If you want to do a monthly option, it would cost 5,859 USD for a full month of botting for 5000 viewers.
>DIY BottingThis is a little bit more complicated, but I understood how it worked after reading about it for 2 hours. What you need for botting are IPs and a specialized app (you can find these online easily) to connect those proxies to a Twitch stream.
>There are three types of IPs you can purchase: Data Centers, Static Residential or Rotating Residential.Data Center IPs are dead. They will be caught almost instantly because it all comes from a single location and Twitch will notice.
Static Residential IPs provide mixed results. If Twitch ever catches on to it, it'll be flagged and permanently blocked so it's the luck of the draw.
Rotating Residential IPs will never be caught BUT they are extremely expensive. For this type of IPs, they don't sell you individual IPs, they sell you bandwidth. So imagine you set up 100 IPs to connect to a stream, all 100 of them will use up the bandwidth and it will be consumed very quickly.
>TLDR:$5500+ for 5000 viewers for 1 month using botting services
Amount varies for DIY Botting
>Conclusion Botting is very fucking expensive.