• tiramichu@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    A stream is a very different format for content, but that doesn’t necessarily make it worse - only different.

    1. As streams are live, anything could happen, so there’s the possibility for unexpected excitement and being a part of that as it happens
    2. Live chat can make a stream feel social and connected with other viewers
    3. Streams give you the ability to speak to the streamer and change the outcome of the stream

    I think that the way people consume content has also changed. A lot of people watch streams “in the background” just as noise while they do other things, not in a way where they are giving the stream their 100% focus in the way you would with a short and well-edited video.

      • wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one
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        11 months ago

        Watch less populous streams.

        Streamers with 100-1k viewers are actually able to read and respond to chat, and you will likely get responses to actually engaging chat messages.

      • Klystron@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        I watch forsen a lot on twitch, and his chat streams at a hundred messages a second so no one will ever see your individual chat. It’s awesome because it’s like a hive mind at work. Everyone is spamming one emote, and then something on stream happens and then every single chatter simultaneously starts spamming another emote in reaction to that. It’s fun.

        For me smaller streams aren’t fun because everything’s (generalizing here) super moderated. No unrelated chat, nothing negative, no backseat gaming, etc. It’s basically post something positive about the streamer or the game and that’s it. Of course if you’re watching your buddy with three other guys not applicable.