Online gamer who is particularly known for his loltyler1 Twitch live streaming channel, which was the 10th most watched Twitch channel of 2018. He has earned more than 2.4 million followers there for his frequent League of Legends broadcasts.
Steinkamp ranked 14th on the North American League of Legends ladder in 2014,[4] but his stream had a modest following until 2016. Steinkamp originally became known in the League of Legends community for toxic behavior shown on his stream, which included personally attacking others, encouraging players to commit suicide, and intentionally losing the game to the detriment of his teammates. This behavior eventually led to permanent bans on 22 unique accounts over several years.[5]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3F0r9PXa-PA
Steinkamp’s stream rapidly grew in popularity in April 2016, when he publicly announced that he had „reformed.“ His Twitch channel reportedly increased from around 5,700 followers before the announcement to over 92,000 followers by the end of the month. His improved behavior quickly lapsed but his following continued to grow, prompting several high profile and professional players to condemn his behavior. Those opposed to Steinkamp’s behavior believed his popularity would encourage and normalize player toxicity, and criticized developer Riot Games for not taking action to prevent this behavior.[6]
On April 30, 2016, Riot Games employee „Riot Socrates“ announced that due to „a well-documented history of account bans for verbal abuse“ and player harassment, Steinkamp would no longer be allowed to own a League of Legends account, saying „we want you to know when the rare player comes along who’s a genuine jerk, we’ve still got your back.“[7][8] Under a Riot Games practice known as ID Banning, accounts Steinkamp played publicly on stream would be immediately banned, even if rules had yet to be broken on the account.[9] To date, this type of ban has only happened a few times in League of Legends history.[a]
After becoming banned, Steinkamp was forced to branch out from playing League of Legends, continuing to grow his fan base as his stream became more eccentric. His stream gained media attention when he acted out a 45-minute action parody of his life in front of a green screen for April Fools’ Day in 2018 called „A Day in the Life of Tyler1“.[11] He also continued to stream other games like PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds.[12]
In October 2017, Riot Games employee Aaron „Sanjuro“ Rutledge made insulting remarks about Steinkamp in the official r/LeagueOfLegends Subreddit‘s Discord server, saying he looked like a „homunculus“ and that he would die „from a coke overdose or testicular cancer from all the steroids.“ The company responded saying „what was said is NOT okay, and we take it extremely seriously“, apologizing to Steinkamp and to the League of Legends community. Steinkamp responded to the incident saying, „It really sucks that some people still hold a grudge… and refuse to acknowledge I’ve changed.“ A few days later, investigative esports journalist Richard Lewis reported that Rutledge no longer worked at Riot Games.[13]
Return
In late 2017, Steinkamp announced on stream that he received an email from Riot Games that his ban would be lifted at the end of the year if the accounts he played in the last month were „clean“ of abusive behavior.[12] In January 2018, Steinkamp announced that he had been unbanned,[14] which was later confirmed with Riot Games by Kotaku.[12] Tyler’s first stream after he became unbanned in January 2018 peaked at over 382,000 viewers, breaking the record for the most concurrent viewers for an individual streamer on Twitch set by Faker in 2017.[15] This record was broken a month later by Dr DisRespect‘s first stream after returning from a 2-month hiatus, although due to conflicting media reporting and technical issues with Twitch, sources disagree whether the record was actually broken.[16]
