Stay awesome bros, I know you will.

I often get recognized on the street.

Unless you stop trying, how can you not fail anymore?

Comments are my main way to communicate with you bros.

Don't be a salad. Be the best god damn broccoli you can ever be.

I make funny videos of me playing video games, and I share those moments.

Do you speak Chopnese huh? Do ya? Chop chop chop chop chop. Aha you don't.

The fact that Disney bought Maker Studios doesn't really change anything for me.

Everyone has played video games at some point these days, and video games are fun.

I just want to entertain; that is my main objective and what comes before everything else.

I'm not out to max my income. I think my viewers would call me on that right away if I did.

My parents said that sitting at home playing video games all day won't bring you anywhere in life.

When there's just so many games out there to play, Nintendo games just went to the bottom of that list.

I just want to connect with you bros. That's all I care about, because you bros' support really means everything to me.

I'm so central to YouTube now, and that puts me in the spotlight and raises a lot of questions like, 'Why is he so big?'

It was so much easier to connect with my fans when I was smaller. I could answer every message, and I enjoyed doing that.

What I and other YouTubers do is a very different thing; it's almost like hanging around and watching your pal play games.

In the very few interviews I've made, it doesn't matter how long we've talked to each other, the headline is still just about my paycheck.

The thing that has made YouTube so successful is that you can relate to the people you're watching to a much higher degree than to the people you see on TV.

Dropping the news to my parents that I was skipping my 'dream education' at Chalmers to sit at home recording videos while playing video games was not easy.

Save the Children is an awesome charity that has helped more than 125 million children around the world, providing everything from school books to food to blankets and shelter.

When I started my YouTube channel in 2010, I never imagined that one day it would be the most subscribed channel in the world and that I would be a part of such a great community.

I'm just so very lucky to be able to do what I do for a living, and giving back is a way for me to express my gratitude. I'm so lucky to be in a position to help people, and that's appealing to me.

With my channel, and what people associate with Internet, most people think it goes viral, you become this huge thing super quick. I never had an explosion or a huge thing. It's just been something that has progressively been growing. It's been building.

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