>>47219410Corpos should never kill what made a v-tuber great, my fav example is Kobo, and how she is becoming the queen of Indonesia, and instead of blocking her Kusogaki keyfay, Holo ID decided to ride with it, but in the same company in EN, they limited Mumei over some controversial topics that now they're starting to relax after almost 2 fucking years.
I don't give a crap of corpos, what i hate of corpos is mostly stupid rules like self-limiting interactions with other v-tubers, blocking collabs or trying to self-preserve a core fanbase via "censoring" other companies, like Wactor or Sendai discords where they ban you if you post holo, niji or other v-tubers content, which create a sphere of fans who can be less open to other fanbases coming in, for example Lily is starting to get a cross over over Kiara spanish fans.
The problem in Latam at least is that we can't have nice thing and we have to hide many things to "acomodate" our self into some "nice citizen" etiquete. That's why watching v-tubers, seeing anime, seeing too much movies or playing games is seems as "cringe" but in the Anglo sphere, those lads can made their own platforms to generate content, but here doing that is cringy and "ha ha fucking nerd kys", hence, many v-tubers doesnt want to do a character to believe and create some rhetoric on why she's a v-tuber in the first place, that issues was solver back in 2019, it's just your culture that doesn't let us evolve into the next phase.
The last part is just an opinion, there's a real untapped market here for v-tubers, nobody fully exploited that, not even Hina Misora couldn't do it because she was not really prepared into the boom she got and thanks to Wactor lack or zero supervision, things went off the rail until the point we know today, it just matter to get the right talent to do it, and i think Hololive can do it, they have the Reimu Experience, the Hakka Experience and what NOT to do in Wactor's case, and the best way to handle them is just copypaste the ID approach, let them free, not THAT free, but free enough to make her own decisions on how to keep growing as a talent. That's called pragmatism, and it's a word very forgotten in these lands.