Since its founding in 2008, Hockey Tutorial's 511 videos have generated millions of YouTube views worldwide, attracted 149,000 subscribers to its YouTube Channel, amassed nearly 69,000 Instagram and 28,000 Facebook followers and hundreds of thousands of devotees to Hockey Tutorial's website.
"I didn't really have any insight on how long this would last," Kibui said. "All I knew that it was something that I enjoyed and provided that people found relevance in it, I would do it as long as I could."
The 31-year-old's operation has grown from just a guy with a camera to a six-person team that worked to capture hockey stories in Kenya, the Himalayas, all of western Europe, most of central Europe, and cities large and small in the United States and Canada.
He said shooting videos in so-called non-traditional hockey countries are a critical part of his mission as "an ambassador to the greatest game on Earth" by highlighting its diversity.
"Until we start showing people that have different color skin, different facial features that also love the game just as much as the Americans and the Canadians do, you can't really expect more people to adopt the sport," he said.
That philosophy is what convinced the Hockey Foundation, a nonprofit group that uses the sport to build character, improve the quality of life and empower children in less fortunate regions of the world, to sponsor a Hockey Tutorial video trip to India in 2016.
"He's built a great following because he's made hockey accessible and made people feel that hockey is accessible to them," said Adam Sherlip, foundation's creator. "Even as something as simple as a video on how to stop. Some of those videos were trying to bring hockey to people that didn't have access or didn't know where to start, all around the world. When he arrived in India, people knew his videos in that hockey community."