
XQC
Andale andale. Throw it.
Former Overwatch World Cup champion for Team Canada and one of the most-watched streamers in Twitch history. Plays nine games at once, sleeps on a couch, and somehow still wins.

Andale andale. Throw it.
Former Overwatch World Cup champion for Team Canada and one of the most-watched streamers in Twitch history. Plays nine games at once, sleeps on a couch, and somehow still wins.
Former Overwatch World Cup champion for Team Canada and one of the most-watched streamers in Twitch history. Plays nine games at once, sleeps on a couch, and somehow still wins.
xQc plays Speed, and a one-second flash is almost too slow for a man who runs nine games at once while reading chat. Pure reaction, maximum chaos, zero patience — the variant is basically his nervous system rendered as a game mode. Andale, andale.
In the Color Memory Game, XQC plays the Speed variant — a one-second flash and a time bonus on top of color accuracy. Every one of XQC’s guesses is generated to land inside their personal accuracy band, so a bad round on their side stays in character and a great round on yours actually wins the match.
60–80% accuracy — a fair fight; consistency wins it.
His 72–82% band is the highest of the Speed-Medium group, and he submits fast, so the time-bonus war is real. You will not out-think him; you out-commit him. Trust your first hue read completely, do not second-guess the slider, and submit early — a quick 70% guess with full bonus beats a careful 85% that arrives late.
Want to face a different bot? See the full challenge roster — fifteen characters across five difficulty tiers, each with their own signature variant. Or play solo Speed to drill the variant on your own first.