>>8177436>>8177507See
>>8176634 and
>>8176754>>8177507>That’s actually common. Yes, people do come and go in a nearly 4 hour stream.it would take 180 different people each 30 seconds to join the stream, vote, leave the stream, continuously during the 4 hours without missing any 30 seconds period.
It is not impossible but it is schizophrenic. Here is the tale of four streams
Watame:
https://piyo.chats.ninja/video/youtube/VYk1zdGfPzIMaimoto:
https://piyo.chats.ninja/video/youtube/vVCamdQgUr4Hal:
https://piyo.chats.ninja/video/youtube/O2Gkam-w4owMiko:
https://piyo.chats.ninja/video/youtube/5XgOWuKwcjcWatame's and Maimoto's have an expected pattern
> Watame3D Live: people join continuously and stay to the end without much variation due to the short duration
> MaimotoPeople join and leave in a seemlingly random fashion with either a persistent upward trend or a persistent downward trend
Then you have two types of schizophrenic behaviours:
>HalPeople stay until the conclusion of a fight, then bail when there are "dead time" then either they themselves return when the fight picks up speed or some other completely different people enter the stream up until the more or less same peak
and last
>MikoBounces EXACTLY between 19k people and 20k people for half an hour, with 200 people joining and leaving every 30 seconds maintaining the exact same peak in an almost straight line for a long time
Both the APEX example and the "schizo chart" example are hard to explain. It is possible to formulate theories but it looks more like an artifact caused by the algorithm measuring CCV than regular human behaviour