YouTube’s ‘Hype’ feature expands to new markets, offering community-driven discovery

Credit: Outlever

Key Points

  • YouTube expands its Hype feature to creators in Brazil, Taiwan, and Turkey, following successful beta tests.

  • The Hype feature allows viewers to promote videos from channels with fewer than 500,000 subscribers, allowing more visibility for smaller creators.

YouTube has extended its Hype feature to more creators in Brazil, Taiwan, and Turkey, after initial beta testing saw success in these markets.

Hype machine: The popular social-first feature allows viewers to “hype” new videos from channels with fewer than 500,000 subscribers, enabling them to compete for higher spots on a leaderboard that highlights the top 100 hyped videos each week. Each user can hype up to three times per week, and eligible videos automatically gain access to the feature without requiring extra steps from creators.

For smaller creators: The expansion addresses smaller creators’ ongoing challenge of reaching new audiences, even when they have dedicated fan bases. YouTube stands to benefit from increased engagement, creator retention, and potential revenue if fans can eventually purchase additional hypes. By relying on a community-driven approach, Hype aims to bypass purely algorithmic discovery and give viewers a more active role in elevating creators they believe in.

Community-led discovery: The efforts align with a broader push across the industry to blend algorithmic curation with community-led discovery. In its first four weeks of beta testing in Turkey, Taiwan, and Brazil, users hyped over five million times across more than 50,000 channels, with the 18-to-24 demographic comprising over 30% of beta participants.

Still in beta, but promising: Because Hype does not affect search ranking or recommendations, its impact remains separate from the platform’s algorithms, potentially limiting overall reach but also protecting channels from negative effects. The feature is still in limited beta, and YouTube continues refining it before any broader rollout. Many emerging creators see Hype as a path to greater visibility outside algorithmic constraints, backed by features like the small creator bonus. Viewers—particularly younger audiences—gain a more direct way to champion the content they value, which can foster a stronger sense of community.