Everyone's Reacting to Gut Genug: How to Find the Newest YouTube Videos with Chronological Search

"Gut Genug" is the 2026 breakout hit from German production trio KitschKrieg, made with duo Blumengarten and rapper Shirin David. Released June 5, 2026 via Four Music/SoulForce Records, it shot to number one in Germany and racked up tens of millions of Spotify streams within weeks; and the reaction videos, covers, and dance edits are still pouring onto YouTube every hour.
Everyone's Reacting to Gut Genug: Here's How to Find the Newest YouTube Videos
YouTube's default search buries the newest uploads under old ones with thousands of views already. If you want the reaction videos, covers, and fan edits that other artists and creators posted minutes ago (not last week) you need chronological search instead of YouTube's popularity-sorted results.
That used to be simple: YouTube's search filters once included a "Last hour" option, letting you jump straight to whatever had just gone up. YouTube removed that filter, so the closest official option now is "Today", which can still mean sorting through hundreds of videos from the last 24 hours.
RecentReborn brings that missing filter back, and takes it further. It restores chronological, last-hour-style search for YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok, sorting results by upload time instead of views.
Search YouTube for the newest "du bist gut genug" uploads →
This link searches the "dubistgutgenug" tag and surfaces every new video the moment it's posted, small reaction channels, international covers in Spanish, French, and Turkish, and fan content that never makes it into YouTube's default rankings.
Why it's worth using:
- Catch reactions before creators blow up: The rawest, most genuine first-listen reactions come from small channels and disappear from search once bigger accounts pile on.
- Find covers early: International versions of "Gut Genug" rarely have the algorithmic reach to surface on their own.
- Comment while creators are still online: A like or comment on a video from minutes ago actually gets seen.
The Backstory: A Nearly Forgotten Demo
The remarkable part of "Gut Genug" is that it almost didn't exist in its current form. It began as an old, nearly forgotten demo sitting on a hard drive from Blumengarten's back catalog. KitschKrieg heard potential in it that the original creators had moved past, and reshaped it into a full single. Shirin David reportedly called it a hit the moment she heard the demo, before the track was even finished.
Why It's Struck a Chord
The song's theme, being "gut genug" (good enough), landed at the right moment: a message of self-acceptance cutting through algorithmic pressure and curated perfection. That combination of a radio-ready hook and an emotionally raw message is a big part of why it spread so fast, and why the conversation around it on social media keeps evolving day to day.
Use RecentReborn to keep up with it in real time and search YouTube for "dubistgutgenug" now.

About the Author
Felix Melchner
I built RecentReborn because Instagram’s decision to hide recent posts made it impossible to find real people and small creators who are not already famous. My vision for 2026 is to restore the original soul of social media by giving everyone a fair chance to be discovered and supported through chronological search.