Oh I'm sure some people will, I'm sure that is an untapped market. You're just not going to get middle school girls to use their allowance on it, like the boys do to have bikini clad women do a fortnite dance.Too bad no one wants to pay for man tits.
Eh, I don't have any moralistic objections to it. Point of fact, I can see arguments that if anything our predominant culture is a bit oversensitive to such displays. (It's a bikini, folks, not lingerie. It's not scandalous to be seen in one.) Yes, it's rather transparently being done to be titilating to the extent allowed. No, I don't see any issue with that - in principle - so long as the streamer is a consenting adult.Really seems like not much of a big deal to me, but I don't really care for twitch to begin with
Here's a question, and I mean this as a legit question. I'm all for the streamer being a consenting adult, that makes sense. What about the people watching? Like if you take one of these titilating streams who, lets be honest, is showing off their body, while nominally playing games. What if their target audience is under age? What if they're whole shtick is earning "tips" and "super chats" from children?Eh, I don't have any moralistic objections to it. Point of fact, I can see arguments that if anything our predominant culture is a bit oversensitive to such displays. (It's a bikini, folks, not lingerie. It's not scandalous to be seen in one.) Yes, it's rather transparently being done to be titilating to the extent allowed. No, I don't see any issue with that - in principle - so long as the streamer is a consenting adult.
On the other hand, the brander in me doesn't like it because it dilutes Twitch's brand identity. Twitch is the video game livestreaming platform. The further they get away from that, the more it loses its niche and becomes a fungible service with its competitors. So I certainly would not begrudge Twitch saying "yeah, no, this isn't the kind of content we want" because it's legitimately out of place for their platform.
Well for starters, see the point about us being oversensitive to bikinis. I don't think we do anyone any favors by treating normal swimwear like it's scandalous. Moreover, there's at least an argument to be made that such attempts constitute a net negative in social impact. If a kid sees a girl in a bikini (or a guy in a speedo, for that matter), I think we as adults shouldn't pay it any mind. It's the kind of thing they'll see plenty of at the pool or beach, so why teach them through our reactions that they're looking at something naughty?Here's a question, and I mean this as a legit question. I'm all for the streamer being a consenting adult, that makes sense. What about the people watching? Like if you take one of these titilating streams who, lets be honest, is showing off their body, while nominally playing games. What if their target audience is under age? What if they're whole shtick is earning "tips" and "super chats" from children?
That's my sticking point. If adults want to give a streamer tips to act all sexy, that's great. But when children do it, even if the kids are horny, I'm less okay with it.
And that is the rub aint it. Twitch at some point is going to NEED age verification (perferably something that cant be fudged like providing a credit card number with a one time dollar fee or something). Especially if they continue down this route.Well for starters, see the point about us being oversensitive to bikinis. I don't think we do anyone any favors by treating normal swimwear like it's scandalous. Moreover, there's at least an argument to be made that such attempts constitute a net negative in social impact. If a kid sees a girl in a bikini (or a guy in a speedo, for that matter), I think we as adults shouldn't pay it any mind. It's the kind of thing they'll see plenty of at the pool or beach, so why teach them through our reactions that they're looking at something naughty?
That being said, if their schtick is enticing children for tips and super chats, that's at best a skeevy business practice and at worst illegal.
No, seriously: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advertising_to_children
Yeah that's pretty much my feelings about it. YouTube is trying to become Tiktok, twitter is trying to become Instagram, etc etc. These things never go well. I mean it's cool and all when you find a random twitch streamer who's just do their hobby, say woodworking, on camera. But there's no streaming service for woodworking, and there's a bajillion sites they could use to stream hot tub bikini action. Which is why I am confused they chose Twitch in the first place. Mayhaps they just don't want the stigma of being on a platform like OnlyFans?On the other hand, the brander in me doesn't like it because it dilutes Twitch's brand identity. Twitch is the video game livestreaming platform. The further they get away from that, the more it loses its niche and becomes a fungible service with its competitors. So I certainly would not begrudge Twitch saying "yeah, no, this isn't the kind of content we want" because it's legitimately out of place for their platform.
I honestly didnt know the best place for the thread actually.That Snorlax is legitimately disgusting...
Yeah that's pretty much my feelings about it. YouTube is trying to become Tiktok, twitter is trying to become Instagram, etc etc. These things never go well. I mean it's cool and all when you find a random twitch streamer who's just do their hobby, say woodworking, on camera. But there's no streaming service for woodworking, and there's a bajillion sites they could use to stream hot tub bikini action. Which is why I am confused they chose Twitch in the first place. Mayhaps they just don't want the stigma of being on a platform like OnlyFans?
EDIT: I just noticed that this was posted in Off Topic, which is funny. Even on here it seems Twitch has lost their identity of being video game streaming platform.
Its called the romance section in the book store. There is a reason the guys on the cover don't look like Larry the Cable guy. Granted, any given woman on those same hetero romantic books are on a scale of 1-10, out of my leauge so pretty ladies must be a good thing for women to watch as well.Too bad no one wants to pay for man tits.
Wow, that takes me back.14 years old with strict Internet filters. I mean more power to them. When I was their age I had to wait until Call On Me or Satisfaction would play on one of the music channels... Like on TV, not radio.
That's not online livestreaming, though. There is no faceless audience that communicates with you with bits of text they must pay to send. If a 13-year-old boy goes to a sunbather on the beach, throws them 3 dollars and asks them to do a dance for them while they record it, she will tell him to gtfo. Anyways, there is a difference between kids and adolescents -- tweenaged kids already pick up titillating cues no problem.If a kid sees a girl in a bikini (or a guy in a speedo, for that matter), I think we as adults shouldn't pay it any mind. It's the kind of thing they'll see plenty of at the pool or beach, so why teach them through our reactions that they're looking at something naughty?
That brings back memories. Ok, not exactly what you were talking about, but this ad was memorable:14 years old with strict Internet filters. I mean more power to them. When I was their age I had to wait until Call On Me or Satisfaction would play on one of the music channels... Like on TV, not radio.
This isnt about fake gamer girls at all. Nobody cares about the just chatting twitch section anymore and these girls no longer have to pretend to be gamers. That is fine.So, fake gamer girls is a thing again?
Ok, if they are targeting kids, that's a problem. And I guess if they fill up search results when you aren't looking for bewbs.
I mean they expect to get paid because they do get paid.Cook, dance, teach people something, be funny, do anything that can be labeled entertainment. I have a problem when girls just sit there and expect to be paid because you are getting the privilege to see some PG13 levels of skin.
And twitch makes a fuckload of money off it. Which is why they ignore it.I mean they expect to get paid because they do get paid.
If they're taking advantage of kids then I have as much an issue with that as I do predatory marketing of microtransactions in games towards kids.
People spend their money on all sorts of pointless bullshit. We all have to collectively pretend that some dude owns the first ever tweet and people still buy diamonds.
The only reason this stands out to anyone as bad compared to any other transaction is pretty obvious.
What makes you say that? Because I think manipulative people are shitty?Man, you really hate women huh?