"I think right away she was like, 'C'mon, really?'" Brown said. "But it's a good idea for charity, I think that's the best aspect. Obviously, I'm using that 24 hours to build as many donations as possible for Hockey Is For Everyone."
Brown, who previously played for the Anaheim Ducks and Tampa Bay Lightning, is becoming big part of the "Fortnite" community, and he and some of the sphere's hockey-loving gamers have developed a kinship in real life even because of the game.
"You get to connect with people on a different level," he said. "There's a guy that's a regular in my stream, and I saw him at one of the events I was doing in Tampa. He said, 'My name is so and so and my stream name is this,' and I was like, 'You should've just said [his stream name] to begin with.' I felt like I already knew him because of that before we actually even met just based on conversation."
Brown uses the community as a way to interact with fans and to give back.
"I got partnered with Twitch to use that for a way to give back to charity and do something I love to do and pretty much have done my whole life and be able to do that as a platform to give back," Brown said. "It's awesome that we can do that: play video games and donate the money."