>>14119770I think the reason is the two different business models. Nijisanji is more about "scale". That means, going for a massive number of talents. Each one has relatively limited management, and great freedom to run their stream how they want. That's why they can collab so freely with all these other companies, because there's less controls and oversight on any individual talent. Nijisanji is more about volume, getting all these talents under their umbrella.
Hololive is much more structured. Management has more power. Much more energy is focused into each individual talent. Unfortunately, I think this creates a very bad social situation. The interactions are often unnatural, forced, scripted. It's doesn't feel right. They don't even talk like real people half the time.
Look at this clip, this will probably blow the mind of a hololive fan:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKkzRCp6gs8Collabing with a male? Swearing? Shouting and laughing? Talking like a real human being? Amazing.