Twitch? I don't get it.

  • Ydrisselle
    Ydrisselle
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Tandor wrote: »
    Ydrisselle wrote: »
    Tandor wrote: »
    Welcome to the year 2005 where people watch others play games.

    I'm not a fan of Twitch or watching others play games in general myself, but pretending like you've never heard of it just to make some condescending point is a bit...weird.

    I wouldn't over-estimate the number of people who've heard of Twitch. I only came across it through ESO Live, and one look at the Twitch chat was enough to make me maximise the ESO Live window and dump the chat. I've never regretted that. As for watching other people play whether it's through Twitch or Youtube, it's likely to be only a tiny minority of MMORPG players.

    I'm quite sure that many, many MMO players watched at least once a WoW bosskill video on YouTube (especially if they were playing WoW too). Or some kind of gameplay video (like an E3/PAX/BlizzCon reveal).

    Really? There's quite a difference between a non-WoW player watching "at least once" a WoW bosskill video and gamers generally watching some kind of gameplay video reveal from a major gaming convention. I have myself watched a few video announcements but I've never watched someone else playing a game, so I watched ESO Live, for example, when they were chatting through a video preview of Summerset but had no interest in watching it when they were streaming a trial. However, I fully understand why some people do watch live streams, I just don't think it's a very significant proportion of the total playerbase.

    I'm not talking about game announcements, I'm talking about gameplay videos which are usually released with the actual announcement (as a separate video). Those are showing what can be expected in the game. I remember watching the first Watch_Dogs gameplay and I thought "It's ambitious, but there is no way they can deliver what they are promising" and I was right...
  • geonsocal
    geonsocal
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    giphy.gif
    Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
    You fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way

    to all you uber productive, living life to the fullest folks whom have no time to watch others "play"...
    scsc.gif
    PVP Campaigns Section: Playstation NA and EU (Gray Host) - This Must be the Place
  • JinMori
    JinMori
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Demion wrote: »
    People actually watch other people play a video game? I thought "no way...I must be reading this wrong...surely there's something people do there other than watch someone else play a video game. Nope...that's it?

    People actually watch others play football?

    Its entertainment for some and yes even a living for others, as long as we find it entertainment for many reason it will be a living for them, ad advertisement and yeah they will make money from it. And it will only grow now when watching it is very mobile.

    They're not pro sports players, they (and Youtube channel folks/etc) are just extroverts, loudmouths, and class clowns, thinking that they're somehow worth broadcasting to the masses.

    I guess part of my issue is having watched, over the years, as stuff people used to do for fun (making FAQ's, game hints, etc) slowly got subsumed under a wave of "monetization" - "But can this be monetized?" "how can I monetize this?" "I deserve for this thing I do to be monetized!" Feh. And that's even before you think about the fact that they're earning this money using other people's intellectual property. I'm surprised the game companies didn't fight that harder, but I suppose they consider it 'free advertising'.

    All i see is someone being salty and envious because people are making money out of being entertainers, because you probably can't otherwise you would probably be doing it, so you categorize it as not a real job.

    Look, people like you that complain about how another person is making money are pathetic, why do you think that entertaining people requires no effort or talent, or anything?
    You are probably projecting.

    Look, to anyone who doesn't understand basic things that humanity knew since the beginning of time, there is a certain thing called entertainment, people like being entertained, therefore they sometime watch other people do stuff, because they like it, and while their at it, might learn something new, just because you don't like it, or don't see the reason to it, doesn't mean that it's not entertaining to others, and by the way, millions of people watch streams,just like millions of people watch sports or comedy, or anything else, what i think the crux of the problem is, you don;t think they deserve that money, and you are envious of the amount of money they are doing, this is the story, 90% of the time.
  • JinMori
    JinMori
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    geonsocal wrote: »
    giphy.gif
    Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
    You fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way

    to all you uber productive, living life to the fullest folks whom have no time to watch others "play"...
    scsc.gif

    I don't think those people are uberproductive anyway, why do they have time to make posts on the forums if they are working so much....

    I respect people who are hard workers, but usually people who works hard tend to be very intelligent, and they understand how the market works, and that people like entertainment, so they don;t complain about this kind of stuff usually, unless they have a legitimate reason to be angry about it, me no like is not a legitimate reason.

    And even if those very hard workers have the time to play and post on the forum, the point i made above still stands.
    Edited by JinMori on May 30, 2018 12:42AM
  • Lonestryder
    Lonestryder
    ✭✭✭
    The world has obviously passed me by.
  • geonsocal
    geonsocal
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    full disclosure time:

    A). the usage of pink floyd's time lyrics was a bit out of context - roger waters was talking more about living in the moment, and, not so much about how we spend our time..."useful" or not...

    B ). personally - I don't really enjoy watching others on youtube or twitch...

    i'd rather be playing - however, as more and more folks cut the cord - diy content providers are going to become more and more prevalent...

    C). i was mostly just ragging on folks whom actually get *** done in life - cuz i'm lazy, and, fairly comfortably numb :p
    Edited by geonsocal on May 30, 2018 3:51AM
    PVP Campaigns Section: Playstation NA and EU (Gray Host) - This Must be the Place
  • geonsocal
    geonsocal
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    The world has obviously passed me by.

    it's kind of funny how the whole forum feedback thing can be a bit of double edged sword - I mean on the one hand it's good to be acknowledged...

    someone agreed with what you said (me :))

    on the other hand - what does that really mean...
    PVP Campaigns Section: Playstation NA and EU (Gray Host) - This Must be the Place
  • Bam_Bam
    Bam_Bam
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Welcome to the future. This is what people do.
    Joined January 2014
    PC EU - PvE & BGs & PvP (Vivec)
    Grand Master Crafter

    #DiscordHypeSquad

    Stream
    Lims Kragm'a
    Bam Bam Bara
  • peacenote
    peacenote
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭
    I also had heard about Twitch for some time but never looked into it until the past year when I found out you could get drops for Legends (which I have since stopped playing, because I got frustrated with the daily login rewards.... annoying to have to be perfect in order to get that gold card).

    I went through a quick journey with Twitch... I initially felt exactly the same as the OP. It seemed ridiculous. Looking back I think it was because it does feel a bit like reality tv or talk shows, both of which I really dislike. It had nothing to do with the fact that it was about gaming/gamers, which I respect and enjoy. But I started to watch for drops and found myself getting drawn in. It was interesting to watch the different type of people that streamed, and after a while I would find myself watching to see if the streamers won their matches, watching to see how they reacted to different situations, etc. It's a bit like virtual people watching. I briefly considered streaming, myself, when I realized it could be a career and wouldn't it be fun to play games for a living? Then I started to feel like I had to have something streaming all the time, to get drops, and it became a chore. Very soon I stopped playing Legends and Twitch. And I got a bit turned off by the donations. Some streamers are flashier about it than others, but I'm looking to cut costs, not add them. I may find your stream interesting but I don't want to feel guilty for not supporting you. Being a former musician, I don't really want to watch unless I'm willing to pony up.

    That said, it has its charm and I agree it's good for everything from background noise to learning about new games to having a community feel. It is much more personal than watching reality tv or a sports match because you can interact with the gamers. It leaves you feeling less disconnected that social media (Facebook, etc.) because you don't get someone's sanitized version of themselves, you get their live reactions and honesty doing something they enjoy. If you like gaming, at all, it definitely has its place and I'd even recommend exploring it. In the end it wasn't for me because it was just another way for me to spend my time when I already had too many distractions. But again, I don't really watch TV either so that's part of why I didn't really get into it for too long.

    To address some other comments I've seen on here, I do not at all feel this way but I think video games sometimes have a negative connotation because they are viewed as being addictive, which directly translates to some folks as "bad" like drugs or gambling or alcohol, especially in the context of games being played by young adults or kids. In fact, in education and other fields the term gamification is used to describe leveraging video game concepts to engage people. This can be viewed as positive but in a way I think this term perpetuates the negative perception of games because it is "tricking" people into doing something. Again, I tell people I am a gamer and think it is a great hobby (more interactive than TV, for example) but just trying to explain why it may be that negativity against gamers does seem to exist.
    My #1 wish for ESO Today: Decouple achievements from character progress and tracking.
    • Advocate for this HERE.
    • Want the history of this issue? It's HERE.
  • DanteYoda
    DanteYoda
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    I don't get it either op.. I can understand watching things if you are stuck or need help with mechanics... but watching others play just because for me is inane..

    That and so many of these Youtube and twitch streamers are basically game parasites feeding off gaming and or exploiting it for gain..

    I detest these things..
  • Lonestryder
    Lonestryder
    ✭✭✭
    geonsocal wrote: »
    The world has obviously passed me by.

    it's kind of funny how the whole forum feedback thing can be a bit of double edged sword - I mean on the one hand it's good to be acknowledged...

    someone agreed with what you said (me :))

    on the other hand - what does that really mean...

    Perhaps just that the world has passed us both by. It’s inevitable, hard-earned and I rather prefer my view from where I sit ;)
    Edited by Lonestryder on May 30, 2018 5:43AM
  • Ohtimbar
    Ohtimbar
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    I think it's stupid as well, but I don't have to watch it. It's not aimed at older gamers like myself anyway. Each to their own.
    forever stuck in combat
  • greylox
    greylox
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Yeah it's weird but the kids love it.
    PC EU

    House of the Black Lotus
    *{Smokes-in-the-Shade }* (Mag pet Sorc Argonian, prolific thief, willing participant of the dark arts, gardener of exotic...herbs)
    {Lugdum The Mechanist} (Hybrid Orc Templar, collector of ancient Ayleid smoking pipes)
    {Rantoul} (Dark Elf Magknight, likes an ale between boss fights, has been known to offer daedric princes out in a fist fight)
    {Red, The Wanderer} (Bosmer stam sorc and hunter extraordinaire)
    {Shoots-For-Stars} (Argonian Mag pet Sorc Ice mage Healer)
    *{Jinny the spark }* (Sassy Imperial Stamplar)
    {Crezzi the Drifter} (Magblade khajiit burglar, available for questionable operations)
    {Grif the Despised} (StamKnight Tank Nord, Eastmarch Master Drinker and spinner of tall yarns)
    {Geraldine Stone-Heart} (High Elf MagSorc Ice Tank, Mystic, practitioner of the ancient arts)
    *{Anawinn}* (Stam pet Ward Redguard, Mother to a bear and an unruly Hunger,Librarian, field medic and natures fist)

    {*}Mains
    { CP 900+ }

    Caretaker of Battle Island (Grand Topal), the holiday destination for the discerning warrior
    Residing in Stay-Moist Mansion-Shadowfen - The Smoking Den (as of 6th feb 2017)

  • Creepsley
    Creepsley
    ✭✭✭
    watching someone play a game your interested in but undecided helps me chose if i want it, and sometimes i just have it on a program called OnTopReplica so i can have it in a little window while i game and still can listen or eventually watch if something fun happens, other than that give aways and releases + some other stuff can be entertaining,

    Still remember when final fantasy 7 came out, sat at my friends house for 10 hours just watching him play XD
  • Knootewoot
    Knootewoot
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭
    I know some people who are very into Starcraft and Heroes of the Storm. They also watch matches on Twitch like a footballgame. So i can understand that.

    People watching single player games, i have no clue why they would watch that. But maybe they cannot afford the game itself. I know i bought and finished "A way out" but a friend just watched a "Lets play" on youtube.

    I only watch Twitch streams if it's about a new game and they show off new stuff.
    ٩(͡๏̯͡๏)۶
    "I am a nightblade. Blending the disciplines of the stealthy agent and subtle wizard, I move unseen and undetected, foil locks and traps, and teleport to safety when threatened, or strike like a viper from ambush. The College of Illusion hides me and fuddles or pacifies my opponents. The College of Mysticism detects my object, reflects and dispels enemy spells, and makes good my escape. The key to a nightblade's success is avoidance, by spell or by stealth; with these skills, all things are possible."
  • geonsocal
    geonsocal
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    geonsocal wrote: »
    The world has obviously passed me by.

    it's kind of funny how the whole forum feedback thing can be a bit of double edged sword - I mean on the one hand i7 7t's good to be acknowledged...

    someone agreed with what you said (me :))

    on the other hand - what does that really mean...

    Perhaps just that the world has passed us both by. It’s inevitable, hard-earned and I rather prefer my view from where I sit ;)

    howdy @Lonestryder ...i was real fortunate about 15 years ago to get a chance to start seeing the world through a younger set of eyes (my god kids: 16 and 7 now)...

    I remember my dad though as he had aged and his perspective of how the world had changed from his younger days was very negative - end times kind of stuff :o

    the world changes...things are most definitely different than when I was a kid...

    sure didn't gave much in the way of video gaming back then, closest thing we had was some weird lunar landing simulator at the high school "computer" lab...

    i don't even remember monitors in the room :) ...some ancient (newer at the time) printer was attached to whatever kind of computer/keyboard it was (late 70's)...

    I do remember I had zero chance of sticking that landing...
    Edited by geonsocal on May 30, 2018 7:57AM
    PVP Campaigns Section: Playstation NA and EU (Gray Host) - This Must be the Place
  • Ajaxandriel
    Ajaxandriel
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    I was thinking the same, OP hahaha
    It's like watching sports. If you are like me and don't watch sports either, it especially has no appeal. Appeals to a lot of people though, so it can attract more people to the game.

    Exactly, it reminds me an episode of the canadian series "Murdoch Mysteries" (s10-6) that happens in the early 20th century ... when the characters learn that people are going to watch football, and even pay for that, instead of playing football themselves, so they find this quite insane.

    It made me laugh how it fits today's days about tendancies to Twitch and Overwatch and all that.

    But if you think about it ...it's merely like an improvised animated show/movie, or a Discord with motion picture.

    TESO:Triskelion - forum RP, guilde francophone
    Ajaxandriel - haut-elfe gardien 50 ;
    Altarya - haute-elfe templière 50 ;
    Angelith - elfe des bois gardienne 50 ;
    Antarius Scorpio - impérial chevalier-dragon 50 ;
    Artémidore de Corbeaulieu - bréton lame noire 50 ;
    Azothos Sadras - elfe noir sorcier 50 ;
    Celestras - haut-elfe sorcier 50 ;
    Diluviatar - elfe des mers sorcier 50 ;
    Dorguldun gro-Arash - orque sorcier 50 ;
    Hjarnar - nordique sorcier 50 ;
    Jendaya al-Gilane - rougegarde chevalier-dragon 50 ;
    Sabbathnazar Ullikummi - elfe noir chevalier-dragon 50 ;
    Selvaryn Virotès - elfe noire lame noire 50 ;
    Tahajmi - khajiit sorcière 50 ;
    Telernil - haut-elfe templier 50 ;
    Zadzadak - gobelin nécromancien 50 ;
    Zandoga - rougegarde chevalier-dragon 50
  • nnargun
    nnargun
    ✭✭✭✭
    krachall wrote: »
    I've seen the posts about Twitch Crates but had very little knowledge of what Twitch is. I heard a business podcast on how the company got started (very interesting, btw, if you're a fan of business startup stories) so I knew the general premise but I'd never looked into what it actually does.

    With all the talk of Twitch and Crates, I did some research. I'm in a bit of shock...

    People actually watch other people play a video game? I thought "no way...I must be reading this wrong...surely there's something people do there other than watch someone else play a video game. Nope...that's it?

    Maybe because I'm older but actually PLAYING a video game is, by far, the biggest waste of time I have in my life. But watching someone else play a video game is about the lamest thing I've ever heard!

    Do people really do that or are they just doing it for free crates? Honestly...

    Is this meant to provoke? It's rather obvious what people like about Twitch...at least as long as you weren't born like a century ago in the pre live-broadcasting era, then cryopreserved in your early twenties and revived just yesterday.

    I've noticed something disturbing, though. Old people and girlfriends often behave the same.
    [PC EU][GERMAN][ENGLISH][730~ CP]
    Flawless Conquerer - vHoF HM - vAS+1 - vMoL - vCR
    the Kuhn - Dunmer - MagNB
    Samjuel-EL - Orc - StamNB
    Son Hala - Altmer - MagSorc
    Draxyl - Argonian - Warden
  • hamsterontherocksb16_ESO
    You know there are two South Park episodes dealing with the fact that kids dont play anymore but watch people play. And then there are videos about people commenting about people playing. Check out South Park season 18 episodes 9 and 10.
  • CelestialSlayer
    CelestialSlayer
    ✭✭✭
    soma people dey watch stuff?? Like wid der eyezee?? :p
  • vonScuzzman
    vonScuzzman
    ✭✭✭
    I'm too busy playing video games to be watching other people play.
    XBox One NA
  • vamp_emily
    vamp_emily
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭
    Rumor of the day.
    ZeniMax Online Studios is having a hard time keeping up with users demands in 2018. Amazon.com ( the owner of Twitch ) is looking into a possible merger or a hostile takover. Amazon.com is planning on taking over the gaming industry and will be integrating live twitch feeds inside the game Elderscrolls Online. Users will expect constant popups and advertisement within the game. Crown crates will be renamed to Amazing Amazon Boxes and will only be giving to players that have Amazon.com prime accounts.


    Edited by vamp_emily on May 30, 2018 1:07PM

    If you want a friend, get a dog.
    AW Rank: Grand Warlord 1 ( level 49)

  • Taysa
    Taysa
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    vamp_emily wrote: »
    ZeniMax Online Studios is having a hard time keeping up with users demands in 2018. Amazon.com ( the owner of Twitch ) is looking into a possible merger or a hostile takover. Amazon.com is planning on taking over the gaming industry and will be integrating live twitch feeds inside the game Elderscrolls Online. Users will expect constant popups and advertisement within the game.

    /thread
    Edited by Taysa on May 30, 2018 1:02PM
    5/24/18: The day ZoS suspended my forum account for trolling a troll.
  • Spottswoode
    Spottswoode
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    https://www.youtube.com/user/PewDiePie

    Literal millionaire from playing video games obnoxiously.

    Twitch is just the logical extension. There are some things I watch on twitch, but I will never pay (nor understand why anyone would) to watch someone play a video game.
    Proud Player of The Elder Bank Screen Online.
    My khajiit loves his moon sugar.
    Steam Profile
    Libertas est periculosum. Liberum cogitandi est haeresis. Ergo, et ego terroristis.
    Current main PC build:
    i7 3770 (Not overclocking currently.)
    MSI Gaming X GTX 1070
    32gb RAM

    Laptop:
    i7-7700HQ
    GTX 1060
    16gb RAM

    Secondary build:
    i3 2330
    GTX 660
    8gb RAM
  • ZeroXFF
    ZeroXFF
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    It's one thing to watch stuff like this, it's another to be compelled via rewards in form of in-game items for doing so.
  • Didaco
    Didaco
    ✭✭✭✭
    It just takes a mind a little bit more opened... You've never really heard about such form of entertainment so it seems the strangest thing to you: Realistically it's no different from watching 20 persons running towards a ball or watching a fictional character turning his hair from black to blonde after screaming for 15 minutes, etc.

    For me it's a nostalgia fact: When I was a kid I loved watching my older brother playing videogames and twitch recreates that feeling, to some extent.
    That, and because English is not my native language, so for me it can only be a good thing.

    For this game in particular, it's just interesting to see how other players fair in an actual scenario, without the cherrypicking that youtube represents. It's interesting to see their builds (that maybe are the ones that you'll never run yourself, because you don't have time for another character, or because you hate it but you still want to see their strong traits and weak ones, etc), the tooltips values, content that you can't access yet... All sort of things really, it's up to you, I'm just listing them from the top of my head.

    Or you could just like that streamer in particular for the kind of content they provide, for the discussions with chat, for their charisma...


  • sylviermoone
    sylviermoone
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ZeroXFF wrote: »
    It's one thing to watch stuff like this, it's another to be compelled via rewards in form of in-game items for doing so.

    No one is holding a gun to your head and forcing you to watch.

    Look, I totally understand the "I'd rather just play the game myself now get off my lawn" point of view. Videos, guides, and tutorials, sure. I'd watched plenty of those, but I'd never really been able to wrap my head around why people wanted to watch other people play a video game rather than play themselves.

    My 16-year-old son is an active streamer, and he gets a lot of the credit for how I started to see Twitch not as just a place where people watched other people play games, but as a place where people went to establish and grow a community. Folks don't just watch to see other people play. You connect with the streamer, you connect with the other people in chat. It's interactive entertainment, and a lot of people like the ability to not only be truly connected to the sources of their entertainment, but to also know that they can take a direct role in supporting that.

    This idea that somehow Twitch is for kids and us "old folks" just don't get it is completely ridiculous, though. Many of the streamers that I connected with during the weekend event I would definitely not classify as kids. ESO tends to have an "older" player base, anyway, with players that have follower the Elder Scrolls IP through Morrowind and before to present day.

    I'm 40 years young, a full-time student, and my hobby is ESO. I run a successful trading guild here, and yes, I am a streamer. I stream guild events mostly because my community asked me to, and they enjoy it. It makes my members feel more invested to know that they never have to "miss" the raffle or the auction, they can tune in and see it even if they can't be in game, and because Twitch is an interactive platform, they can still be involved in those events rather than just passively watching, and because I do this, my community is stronger than ever, and because of the Twitch Drop event, it's now bigger than ever, because people were able to find it and participate in it for the very first time.

    The drop event was so great for the greater ESO community because it got lots of people engaged in a way they have never been. It connected big streamers to medium to small in a way that was truly positive and supportive. I am so grateful that ZOS gave us all this opportunity.

    The bottom line really is that Twitch doesn't have to be for you. If connecting with the community through interactive entertainment isn't your thing, that's fine, it doesn't have to be. You don't have to "get it". To come in here and poo-poo on other people because they enjoy consuming and creating this type of content though is so beyond the pale. Yes, there are some that are able to make a living from this platform, but all of us are doing it to share our love of ESO with people and engage with people that love it as much as we do.

    And there is nothing wrong with that if it's how we chose to spend our time.




    Co-GM, Angry Unicorn Traders: PC/NA
    "Official" Master Merchant Tech Support
    and Differently Geared AF
    @sylviermoone
  • bloodthirstyvampire
    bloodthirstyvampire
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    krachall wrote: »

    Maybe because I'm older

    That :p
  • kylewwefan
    kylewwefan
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    You know, I thaught the app was bugged or something. Every time I go there to check out the eso things it says nothing playing now.

    I figured it was recorded and I could watch it later or something like YouTube. Guess not. Must have had to been there? Is it only live? Can anyone stream twitch stuff?
  • WaltherCarraway
    WaltherCarraway
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    https://www.youtube.com/user/PewDiePie

    Literal millionaire from playing video games obnoxiously.

    Twitch is just the logical extension. There are some things I watch on twitch, but I will never pay (nor understand why anyone would) to watch someone play a video game.

    There's no ESO version of PDP,

    and there's only one PDP

    and he's ... average.

    Funny how some folks idolize him to the extent of glorifying every molecules of his fart. LOL
    Back from my last hiatus. 2021 a new start.
Sign In or Register to comment.