Twitch streamer captures terrifying moment 7.6 earthquake shakes Japan
A Twitch streamer caught the terrifying moment a 7.6 earthquake rocked Japan on New Year’s Day during a live broadcast, leaving viewers shocked as her house trembled.
On Monday, January 1, a massive earthquake struck Japan’s west coast in its Ishikawa prefecture, rocking the country’s central island and prompting tsunami alerts all the way to neighboring nations like Russia and South Korea.

According to reports,the quake killed at least one person, taking out buildings and even starting fires, leaving“tens of thousands” of homeswithout power.
OneTwitchstreamer, who happened to be broadcasting during the time of the quake around 4 PM, managed to capture the moment during her broadcast, leaving viewers shocked.

Twitch streamer captures massive Japan earthquake in terrifying broadcast
Japanese Twitch streamer‘Shiori’was streaming in Niigata, Japan — an area about four hours away from the quake’s epicenter in Ishikawa prefecture — when she received an earthquake alert on her phone.
“Oh my god, it’s big!” she exclaimed. “I gotta go outside!”

The streamer fled from her home as viewers couldsee the room visibly shaking,rocking back and forth as the sound of rumbling and items falling off of shelves grew louder and louder.
The moment was nothing short of horrific, leaving viewers stunned as they commented in the chat: “Oh no,” “Holy shit,” “I hope they get out safely.”

The moment lasted for about two minutes beforeShiori returned to her room,reassuring viewers that she and her family were alright but were preparing for a possible evacuation.
“Guys, we’re okay, everybody’s alive,” she said. “But we just had a super huge one — level six? — so we’re gonna prepare for evacuation right now.”
Two bats crash Twitch stream in chaotic mid-game visit
Kick streamer rushes to hospital after run-in with stray dog leaves her injured
Streamer struck by lightning in shocking Twitch broadcast
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishidamobilized search and rescue teamsin an effort to free any trapped citizens and save lives. “I urge people in areas where tsunamis are expected to evacuate as soon as possible,” he said.
As reports continue to flow in, Japan’s disaster prevention app on Twitter/X wasprohibited from posting about the situationdue to reaching the site’s API limit on their “basic” subscription, sparking outrage against the platform.