QTCinderella has addressed a recurring controversy surrounding the Streamer Awards, clarifying why certain creators, often labeled “problematic” by the community, consistently fail to appear on nomination lists. For years, online debates have suggested that these personalities are deliberately excluded or “blackballed” from the event. But according to QTCinderella, the truth has nothing to do with backstage politics and everything to do with audience participation. Her explanation comes amid another wave of complaints from fans of overlooked streamers frustrated by the annual results.In a recent stream, she pushed back on claims that any creator is blocked from eligibility, emphasizing that the nomination and voting system is overwhelmingly fan-driven. She explained that while some communities loudly criticize the award outcomes, they rarely take part in the process that actually determines nominees. Streaming audiences that don’t show up for nomination streams, social media campaigns, or voting rounds leave their favorite creators at a natural disadvantage, regardless of popularity or controversy. QTCinderella noted that this pattern repeats every year, and the misconceptions persist just as consistently.
Why some streamer communities fail to influence nominations the way they expect
QTCinderella made it clear that the system itself is not designed to exclude anyone. Instead, she said the lack of engagement from certain fanbases is the real issue, “Somebody said, ‘Are problematic people blackballed from getting nominated?’ No! They’ve just never nominated. Turns out, their audience doesn’t show up. Audiences will complain every year that they weren’t nominated and then not do nominations on stream or not tweet… they’ll give nothing.” The Streamer Awards operates on a structure where 70% of the outcome is determined by fans and 30% by panelists. This means that if a community doesn’t actively participate, whether through sharing voting links, hosting nomination discussions, or mobilizing on social media, their favorite streamer is statistically unlikely to rise into contention. In contrast, creators with highly engaged, mobilized audiences consistently dominate the nomination lists, even when they aren’t the largest streamers overall.As QTCinderella reiterated, the issue isn’t about drama, character, or reputation, it’s simply about numbers.QTCinderella’s explanation highlights a long-standing reality of the Streamer Awards: engagement, not controversy, decides visibility. As long as some fanbases continue to be passive during nomination season, the pattern of missing or overlooked streamers is likely to continue, regardless of how loud the complaints grow afterward.Also Read: Misogynistic hate mob targets QTCinderella amid Streamer Awards controversy — Here’s what happened
