>>704710I know, but some of them seem to take comments more personally than others.
It's hard to know how much is fiction and how much is real, but what's undeniable is their true reality seeps into their characters, even if unintentional. Now, following that, you can imagine at times that filter or acceptance may fall apart a little -- imagine someone who listened to you talk with your mother makes an incestuous guro manga where you're abused and tortured by loved ones.
Point being you never know what will get through someone's walls... they might be able to handle everything fine, only to have something they genuinely struggle with in reality somehow find it's way into their persona, only to then be expanded upon by someone else in a negative manner.
Another example, I imagine, is if life events change and something that was fine before is no longer so. Say someone's mother dies who was previously part of their streams -- you can probably imagine more sensitivity towards depictions of that relationship.
I won't claim to speak for the girls; nonetheless I know streamers in much more thick skinned jobs, such as griefing/hacking, who still, partially due to their sheer exposure to thousands over such long durations, have been sucessfully broken. I think it's a question of when, not if, we'll see see someone have some sort of mental health issue over their career in v-tubing.