>>108148967some do. those men are present and accounted for among vtuber viewers. that being said, are we just expected to have guys toil endlessly without any kind of approval or recompense? i guess so, because the fact vtubers are popular enough to warrant their own board on this site and have fairly stout reach among men specifically shows an issue. i won't get into other issues that are off-topic, because that could go on for a whole thread of its own.
>>108149032you sure about that, guy? it's not a "hit the oil rig nigga" issue. if you actually start talking to people in chats/comment sections instead of treating them like NPCs, you'll find out a good amount of them are decently accomplished. an astounding amount, relative to my own expectation of near zero, are tradesmen like myself. obviously this is anecdotal from some internet retard, but i've commented back and forth with guys who are everything from concrete pourers to electricians to millwrights and fellow machinists. these are working people, people with a general understanding of work in > results out, they get that undeserved compliments and praise don't happen. they are largely here because they have nothing coming in from their real life in the way of approval, and also because vtubers are generally way more laid back and less competitive than male streamers working the same games and projects.
but anyway, it's not that we're just not present on these jobs that get praise. that doesn't happen, i'm refuting the job basis entirely outside extreme examples. jobs more dangerous than retail/office work get the same or *less* praise/recognition until you get to the possibility of sudden death.