RTGame
Irish-Canadian YouTuber and streamer (born 1995)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Daniel Condren (born 13 April 1995), better known as RTGame, is an Irish-Canadian YouTuber and live streamer.[1][2][3][4] He is known for his humorous commentary during gameplay,[5] He began making videos in 2011, began streaming in 2016, and experienced a surge in popularity in 2018.[1] As of 24 December 2025[update], his YouTube channel has over 2.9 million subscribers,[6] while his Twitch channel has over 1.2 million followers.[7]
13 April 1995
- YouTuber
- live streamer
Early life
Condren was born in Ireland on 13 April 1995,[8] the son of an Irish father and Canadian mother. He holds dual Irish and Canadian citizenship.[9] He studied at Trinity College in Dublin, where he earned a bachelor's degree in English literature in November 2017.[10][11] It was during his time in college when he gained the title of 'The Drift King' after winning a college Mario Kart tournament on 3 December 2015.[12][13][better source needed]
Career
Condren created his YouTube channel on 13 August 2011 and uploaded his first video, a Terraria Let's Play, five days later.[14] In December 2018, he joined Yogscast's annual charity event Jingle Jam, where he helped raise $3.3 million.[15][16]
His videos have included organising Minecraft building sessions for his Twitch subscribers,[1] spending 13 days (and an in-game time of 2 days) searching for a shiny Wooloo in Pokémon Sword and Shield,[17] and knocking out every NPC in the Hitman level of Sapienza in order to stuff them all into a meat freezer and kill the entire population with a single shot into an explosive canister (which ultimately failed when the bodies formed a "meat shield").[3][4][18] He was more successful in 2026, when he published a video where he attempted to crush the population of Hitman 3's Mendoza level using a large winepress.[19][20]
In December 2022, YouTube age-restricted some of his videos. Condren asserted that the platform was "retroactively restricting videos that violate recent policy changes."[21] The updated guidelines gained visibility when he made a video on the topic,[22] with YouTube set to revise the policy after being criticised for its poor communication regarding these changes.[23][24]