>>26086374I'm saving this for later. Don't think it necessarily might happen this year, but maybe next one Regardless this is a good analysis and prediction. I believe this must be a struggle for every single content creator or streamer who dedicates exclusively to this.
Moreso, what man or woman wouldn't feel unfulfilled and think they're wasting their time on a pointless job, like data entry or sales worker? Why wouldn't that same thing apply to a YouTube or Twitch job which, where drive mostly depends on how your fans express their support or donate, how much fun you are having with your content, or how stale it has become, and not on how meaningful your "profession" is? In a niche portion of it, like VTubing, few people know what you are doing, so there's a risk of feeling disconnected from all the acknowledgement you could get. Regular content creators will ultimately try get around this issue by building a family and maybe blogging about it, getting a job on mainstream entertainment industry, or opening a business (in the same entertainment industry or not). But Vtubers, what can they do? Unless they have revealed their identity or never concealed it in the first place, not a single person will find them on the street and say "hey you are x vtuber, i love your streams, may i take a pic? thanks nice to meet you". Even if they have been doxxed, it's very likely most fans would abstain themselves from approching out of "respect". It's sad, specially if the many tragic backstories of VTubers are true, because it reveals being a VTuber is a way of coping or bettering themselves, rather than something they chose out of their most possibly complete free will and life goals.
tl;dr: OP needs to work on his Mucho texto, but in the end this type of doomposting is one I respect and accept on the board