Maybe it's just me, but my FYP has been flooded with VTubers talking about bad experiences with managers/editors/etc.
Here's a small list of some of the most common red flags I've seen...
What are some red flags you've seen?
I see so many small Vtubers either in collabs or voice calls on stream, and while this definitely goes against the common narrative, imo collabing is going to hurt rather than help in a lot of cases. Not all the time, but a lot of the time. Esp. if you do it too frequently.
How to blow up a post on X/Twitter in my experience (since I've seen a few people talking about this recently). This isn't any surprising or profound advice, but making posts that do well isn't surprising or profound.
Recently, I've seen some disgusting behavior in this community and I thought it would be helpful if I shared some strategies I've found helpful when dealing with conflict. Please remember that this is not a guarantee or any sort of exhaustive list, just what I could fit on a page
I've been having to take Kick a little bit more seriously recently given the behavior of Twitch and the slow stream of viewers moving from other platforms to Kick. I thought you all might appreciate some of the numbers I found.
Over the past 24 hours a lot of information about the new YouTube AI editing "shadow update" has come out. Here's the 30 second version and I'll reply to the post with some links to supportthis information
In my experience, a lot of Vtubers vaguely have the right idea about how to grow their channel, but don't understand the nuances and end up making things harder for themselves. Here are a few of the most important things I've noticed, and some of those nuances.
Your model isn't the reason people watch your streams, you are.
Sure having a model that is nice on the eyes is better, but the people who stick around aren't usually doing so because you have a nice model.
I just realized, Twitch also just introduced a new policy that allows them to ban streamers at any point for any reason (basically). And since Clancy thinks that small streamers are the problem... I would strongly suggest any smaller streamers try to gain some presence elsewhere.
Despite how it may seem sometimes, Vtubing isn't really based on luck. Some people seem to think it is (and there is some luck involved), but what you do and the effort you put in has a tangible and large impact on how many people see your content.
I see a lot of smaller Vtubers trying to grow through collabs, but the collabs often end up flopping. Here are some ways to make sure the collab doesn't flop and help you have the best collab possible.
I see so many small Vtubers either in collabs or voice calls on stream, and while this definitely goes against the common narrative, imo collabing is going to hurt rather than help in a lot of cases. Not all the time, but a lot of the time. Esp. if you do it too frequently.
Why does it seem like there's this expectation for VTubers to sink hundreds or even thousands of dollars into their channel before they have a meaningful following? Sure the fancy stuff helps in terms of exposure, but the fancy stuff isn't the reason people watch you.