The long wait is over, ‘KidPoker’ is now available on Netflix.

The documentary profiling the life of poker superstar Daniel Negreanu is now available on Netflix. The movie, called KidPoker, is now available to watch on the streaming service in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

KidPokerbegins with Negreanu’s childhood in Canada, where he eventually migrated to pool halls and earned money hustling. It then follows him to fabulous Las Vegas, where in 1998 he became the youngest World Series of Poker bracelet winner ever at the tender age of 23.

KidPokeralso chronicles Negreanu’s rise to fame in the poker world, a career that includes six World Series of Poker bracelets and two World Poker Tour titles. Negreanu is #2 on the all-time money list for the World Poker Tour at $6.4 million.

More impressively, Negreanu is #1 on the all-time tournament money list worldwide at $32.4 million and has booked seven-figures in live winnings every year since 2008 sans one (2010). Negreanu and other poker players are now descending on Las Vegas for the 2016 World Series of Poker, which begins on Wednesday from the off-Strip Rio.

KidPokerincludes commentary from fellow poker pros like Vanessa Selbst, Phil Ivey, European Poker Tour creator John Duthie, and Antonio Esfandiari. PokerStars billed it as an “essential documentary feature for sports fans and champions of the ‘underdog.'”

The film also profiles the relationship Negreanu had with his late mother as well as his induction into the esteemed Poker Hall of Fame in 2014.

“This is a story of clear intention and determination in that the odds were stacked against me, especially in the early years,” Negreanu said of the film. “I want this to be an inspirational film so that when people watch it, they feel they can get back on the horse and pursue their dreams too.”

There will be plenty of people who can get inspired by the Canadian, as Netflix, a subscription-based streaming service, passed 75 million subscribers worldwide in January. As of the end of Q1 2016, that number stands at more than 80 million, a far cry from the 23 million that Netflix had five years ago.

Netflix has grown almost four-fold over the last half-decade thanks in part to a variety of original, critically acclaimed series like Kevin Spacey’s “House of Cards,” the women’s prison drama “Orange is the New Black,” and the Tina Fey-created “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.”

KidPoker, which has a rating of 8.3 stars out of 10 on IMDB, premiered last December on the Canadian television channel TSN4 as well as a showing at the TIFF Bell Lightbox Theater in downtown Toronto. It’s produced by Francine Watson and PokerStars.

Upon originally seeing the movie unfold before his eyes, Negreanu said, “Totally blown away watching KidPoker. Didn’t think I would cry through half of it, but yup. Can’t wait for you all to see it.”

Among those in attendance when KidPokerfirst aired last year was comedian Gerry Dee, who said, “Just saw KidPoker. Amazing story. Amazing film.”