Hi all,

I’m new to Beehaw, but have been enjoying the enviroment so far.

Me and my girlfriend are twitch streamers (I also upload to youtube), and I was wondering if there is a community here for small content creators to help each other. She uses Discord for that but I don’t care for it personally.

I didn’t see anything when I searched, but that very well could have been user error as I’m new to the fediverse.

Thanks in advance!

    • I didn’t mean to imply it was a bad idea, on the contrary, I think it’s a great idea and something I’d like to be a part of. I just wasn’t sure what a small content creator community would look like if not self promotion and boosting each other.

      It could pertain to issues they’re having as a content creator, but that’s going to vary widely depending on the content they’re making. If it’s a twitch streamer like yourself specific questions might be better suited to the Gaming community. If it’s for art/writing content creation (like me) issues/questions might be better suited for the Creative community.

      That’s more what I meant, what would the small content creator community look like that couldn’t already be better served by the specific content communities? And how would we prevent it from becoming a ladder of self promotion?

      •  Pixelologist   ( @Pixelologist@beehaw.org ) OP
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        1 year ago

        It is twofold. one: support in general, and creating a schedule where people watch each other together and greatly boost the likelihood that that stream will be suggested to someone else. Engagement in the chat also greatly boosts the likelihood that new viewers will comment/stay longer.

        The other thing is full time streamers live a very specific kind of life that is generally very different from most people. I feel there is value in congregating with other people with the same goals and mindset.

        By having a community with schedules/party trains streamers learn about each other and form friendships, and in theory everyone wins. I’m ok with streaming to 0 people and then people watching it later but it’s a lot more fun when you have all your friends in the chat with you.

        Additionally, certain games (like among us just as an example) are way more fun when you’re playing in a voice call with people you know as opposed to random people. Having this sort of community makes a lot of games fun that otherwise wouldn’t be. High skill multiplayer games might take months of learning to get good at, but if everyone is new this isn’t a problem.

        I will think more about what could be done to mitigate the potential issues you mention, but from what I’ve seen the best way is just to remain small and have a strong focus on community building. Beehaw seems to already have a very compatible culture, although I must admit I am new here.