The public numbers are lagging behind, but the new Down the Rabbit Hole on EVE Online has just reached 1 million views after 38 hours, making this my most successful release by a wide margin. I couldn't have ever hoped for this sort of result. Thank you, all of you.
I've been alerted to this visual artist who started drawing in Kid Pix, a children's art program from 1989, as a joke. Then he started taking commissions. He's gotten... distressingly good. He's streaming it now, and it feels surreal.
Hahaha this one dude has said a million creepy things, but I guess this one would be the highlight. “I made this suit! I used stuffed animals that I made love to before using them for the suits. It also has a vagina I can pee from so I never need to take it off”
Reeked like death
With the new Down the Rabbit Hole about EVE Online uploaded and ready to launch tomorrow, I'd like to restate that I'm perfectly comfortable with streamers watching my videos on their stream. I hope you and your viewers enjoy it.
The timeline for the new Down the Rabbit Hole on EVE Online has been filled out. I'm profoundly embarrassed with how long this has taken, as well as with my horrifically inaccurate and overly hopeful estimations, but the bulk of my work is done.
As all of the pieces of the new Down the Rabbit Hole about EVE Online fall into place, I can finally give a precise runtime: 5 hours, 55 minutes, and 14 seconds.
In middle school, I wrote 70 pages of a novel, read what I'd created, and concluded that I simply didn't have the skill to craft what I wanted. After getting my English degree and spending five years with Down the Rabbit Hole, maybe it's time to try telling my own stories again.
One million views within a week on a 2 hour+ video about a chess computer is indicative of the kind of audience I have, I think. Thank you so much, everyone.
To those who feel like they don't have the talent to be a creator, I'll let you in on a secret: nobody has that talent. It's always just work and practice, and often a lot of frustration. When things get difficult, it's not talent that carries a person; it's dedication.