>>15695426If you're a literal who then there are several avenues you can take.
>Pay 2 WinCommission a high priced artist (no one gives a fuck about riggers, Iron Vertex is overpriced garbage and most viewers can't even tell what's going on) and get yourself a good model. Shill that model as much as you can. Your tweets should always have a "Call to Action" it's the dumb question that clickbait asks on social media. Shit like
>you come home and see me on your bed like this, what would you do?It baits out engagements like no other.
>The Relatable ChuubaEveryone has a basic set of relatable experiences that they all go through. Doesn't matter what it is. Shit that becomes memes like the bald ttv Wraiths in Apex that DC the moment they get downed. Find something that's a relatable experience that other vtubers and vtuber watchers can enjoy. Yes, you want engagements from other vtubers even if they aren't going to watch your streams because they'll retweet it out to their viewers. A chuuba who retweets your shit will likely share a pool of viewer that may be more interested in the content you create.
>The TalentShow off your skills. But tease it. Can you sing? Drop a chorus of a song with a link to your cover or tease a karaoke in the future. Add a Call to Action and ask viewers "What song should I sing next?" and get them to reply to your post. Can you draw? Spam your doodles of other chuubas. Here's a secret art chuuba trick. You don't have to lurk and watch another chuuba's stream to draw them. You just
watch clips and pick a funny one then draw fanart of that funny scenario that happened to a bigger chuuba. Gives off the impression you were there, viewers already have that sense of "I was there" hype and will like and share it.
Now, you should be able to follow up all of those with the implied "if you want more of this fun shit you engaged with, come watch me" which is outside the discussion of how to market as a literal who.