Ludwig shades Twitch while congratulating Kai Cenat for breaking sub record
Ludwig reacts to his sub record being broken by Kai Cenat
But in the tweet, he decided to throw in a little jab at Twitch, where he said, “Twitch now pay the man before you lose another record breaker.”
Ludwig broke his sub-record on Twitch in his own historic 30-day subathon. But he eventuallyswitched over to YouTube. Citing thatYouTube paid betterin comparison to Twitch and offered a better deal than what Twitch had.

He also said he was never too attached to Twitch as a platform, even though he was known at some points in his Twitch career as “the golden boy of Twitch”.
Biggest Twitch records: Longest subathon, longest Twitch stream, most subs

Unlikely streamer on pace to overtake Kai Cenat as most-watched Twitch star
Kai Cenat appears on Jimmy Fallon and shocks one Twitch streamer with big shoutout

And he seems to have issued Twitch a warning to pay what Kai has earned before he decides to jump ship to another streaming platform as well.
In a recentMogul Mail videodiscussing the sub-record being broken, he joked with a sarcastic laugh, “he gets to keep the money, like I did.” Poking fun at the fact a good portion of his profits went to Twitch.

And he said to Twitch directly, “It’s time to give the man the bag.”
He then read out Twitch’s congratulatory tweet, and said, “it’s really great to commemorate that in a tweet, but now pay the man Twitch.”
“He has earned you the most money any human has ever earned you in a single month in Twitch history, time to give him a bag so he sticks around for the next couple of years” he explained.
Ludwig is not too broken up about his record being broken
But Ludwig is very happy for Kai to take his place. As he said in the video, “I do feel like Kai deserves it.”
“Just purely in the amount of work he put into what this subathon is” he continued. Ludwig admits his subathon was boring, and people were more interested in seeing the timer go down rather than him as a streamer.
Whereas, he feels Kai put more effort into his subathon in comparison. “If you watch any of the subathon, it was really well done. He rented out an entire mansion in Los Angeles, he had a camera operator 24/7 with different crews that would change the room he was in. And he had people producing and planning out content for every day of the 30 days.