>>2930154If a goal if yours is to get video comment engagement I'd say incorporate a niche/genre that you also enjoy. It could be interesting camera motions like 000, girls dancing while straddled to sinsacks like kidps2, clothing physics like the Chinese MMDs, or stripping like Krag.
Picking a popular character like VTubers or Hoyoverse waifus can also help but not entirely necessary.
High quality lighting and rendering helps too but I've seen content succeed without it. Also with my own experience, my most popular video at the moment has pretty bad, over saturated lighting.
Here are a breakdown of the comments I get:
-1 to 3 of the comments on every video are usually some variation of "nice" with the exception of that one meme video where 6 of the comments are some variation of "nice"
-Most comments bring up a random niche I did in the video (Kuromaru, Hypnosis, etc). These usually also have a comment asking to make more videos of the niche (I personally don't specialize in a specific niche, I just make what I want)
-A small few are suggestions like how they'd like to see the character do a certain dance.
-Occasionally there are comments about how "sexy" the characters are. I noticed is these are only on videos where I use blonde characters; probably a coincidence.
-The rest are a bit more detailed praises rather than just a "nice" comment.
>>2930233No that's not normal. If you can't figure out why your content is sticking then the best way is to ask for feedback (Be ready for harsh comments). Incorporate any constructive ones and ignore the ones that just flame ("This sucks" doesn't help you improve but "Lighting is too dark" or "Camera angles are weird/uninteresting" can help identify areas of improvement).
But I suppose a question to ask yourself is how does your content stand out from other people's content. (is the video render high quality like those Chinese Blender videos? Is there very little clipping? Are the camera angles/shots interesting?)