I thought most drops required 15 minutes?
... or am I missing something?

When you look at https://www.twitch.tv/drops/campaigns , it gives the details for the drops. This particular campaign does say that it only lasts for one hour. I was late for the last one and the only consolation is that for the next "ESO Live at Home" stream, your counter will start at 66%. I'm not sure where you are seeing misleading advertisements, but checking this link will give you the campaign details and is standard for all Twitch drops.
When you look at https://www.twitch.tv/drops/campaigns , it gives the details for the drops. This particular campaign does say that it only lasts for one hour. I was late for the last one and the only consolation is that for the next "ESO Live at Home" stream, your counter will start at 66%. I'm not sure where you are seeing misleading advertisements, but checking this link will give you the campaign details and is standard for all Twitch drops.
When I see an ad on instagram or wherever that says, tune in for stream starting at 3pm est time and watch for 15 min for a drop and it doesn't say stops at 4pm est in the ad - it's misleading.
edit: and honestly, if the stream stops at 4, fine. But if it goes longer and they turn off drops just because, that's pretty crappy. (And having the conditions show up like that by digging down into details on the site doesn't really change what's available for you to see of the details on various places it's advertised) It should be clear if they are not trying to operate in a shady way. Hard to find fine print is used all too often for bad practices by businesses instead of just for legal protection and conditions. There is no reason they can't list the time clearly everywhere, nor is there any reason they can't just let it go until they are done broadcasting.
I'm sorry you missed getting an Ouroboros crate and caused you to be upset. I was just trying to explain how Twitch drops work and where you can see the campaign details. The more you know.
When you look at https://www.twitch.tv/drops/campaigns , it gives the details for the drops. This particular campaign does say that it only lasts for one hour. I was late for the last one and the only consolation is that for the next "ESO Live at Home" stream, your counter will start at 66%. I'm not sure where you are seeing misleading advertisements, but checking this link will give you the campaign details and is standard for all Twitch drops.
When I see an ad on instagram or wherever that says, tune in for stream starting at 3pm est time and watch for 15 min for a drop and it doesn't say stops at 4pm est in the ad - it's misleading.
edit: and honestly, if the stream stops at 4, fine. But if it goes longer and they turn off drops just because, that's pretty crappy. (And having the conditions show up like that by digging down into details on the site doesn't really change what's available for you to see of the details on various places it's advertised) It should be clear if they are not trying to operate in a shady way. Hard to find fine print is used all too often for bad practices by businesses instead of just for legal protection and conditions. There is no reason they can't list the time clearly everywhere, nor is there any reason they can't just let it go until they are done broadcasting.
The stream didn't go longer than 4pm though did it? The stream went for exactly 1h 8minutes 35seconds and if it started at 3pm then it ended at 4.... That's exactly as it was advertised.
The only shady thing is that they didn't make it clear there would be additional drops to the ones that are currently going on.
When you look at https://www.twitch.tv/drops/campaigns , it gives the details for the drops. This particular campaign does say that it only lasts for one hour. I was late for the last one and the only consolation is that for the next "ESO Live at Home" stream, your counter will start at 66%. I'm not sure where you are seeing misleading advertisements, but checking this link will give you the campaign details and is standard for all Twitch drops.
When I see an ad on instagram or wherever that says, tune in for stream starting at 3pm est time and watch for 15 min for a drop and it doesn't say stops at 4pm est in the ad - it's misleading.
edit: and honestly, if the stream stops at 4, fine. But if it goes longer and they turn off drops just because, that's pretty crappy. (And having the conditions show up like that by digging down into details on the site doesn't really change what's available for you to see of the details on various places it's advertised) It should be clear if they are not trying to operate in a shady way. Hard to find fine print is used all too often for bad practices by businesses instead of just for legal protection and conditions. There is no reason they can't list the time clearly everywhere, nor is there any reason they can't just let it go until they are done broadcasting.
The stream didn't go longer than 4pm though did it? The stream went for exactly 1h 8minutes 35seconds and if it started at 3pm then it ended at 4.... That's exactly as it was advertised.
The only shady thing is that they didn't make it clear there would be additional drops to the ones that are currently going on.
You just pointed out what I already said, yea: it went 9 min over I said up above. Which means I watched the stream that started at 3pm for 22 minutes and didn't get a drop.
But as Aislinna pointed out, the details if you dig for them on twitch say between X time and Y time - but every reminder I saw from zos for watching it, like their social media promos and such don't say it like that.
And like I said above, there really is no reason. If it's going on longer than 1 hour and people are still watching and they are still broadcasting, leave the drops on just to be good to your customers. But either way, I'm just asking for everything to be clear up front. I don't want to have to wait for the drops to be on, then drill down on twitch to see any fine print - it should be in every promo. Takes no more effort for them to say drops will be 3-4pm instead of just starting at 3pm.
When you look at https://www.twitch.tv/drops/campaigns , it gives the details for the drops. This particular campaign does say that it only lasts for one hour. I was late for the last one and the only consolation is that for the next "ESO Live at Home" stream, your counter will start at 66%. I'm not sure where you are seeing misleading advertisements, but checking this link will give you the campaign details and is standard for all Twitch drops.
When I see an ad on instagram or wherever that says, tune in for stream starting at 3pm est time and watch for 15 min for a drop and it doesn't say stops at 4pm est in the ad - it's misleading.
edit: and honestly, if the stream stops at 4, fine. But if it goes longer and they turn off drops just because, that's pretty crappy. (And having the conditions show up like that by digging down into details on the site doesn't really change what's available for you to see of the details on various places it's advertised) It should be clear if they are not trying to operate in a shady way. Hard to find fine print is used all too often for bad practices by businesses instead of just for legal protection and conditions. There is no reason they can't list the time clearly everywhere, nor is there any reason they can't just let it go until they are done broadcasting.
The stream didn't go longer than 4pm though did it? The stream went for exactly 1h 8minutes 35seconds and if it started at 3pm then it ended at 4.... That's exactly as it was advertised.
The only shady thing is that they didn't make it clear there would be additional drops to the ones that are currently going on.
You just pointed out what I already said, yea: it went 9 min over I said up above. Which means I watched the stream that started at 3pm for 22 minutes and didn't get a drop.
But as Aislinna pointed out, the details if you dig for them on twitch say between X time and Y time - but every reminder I saw from zos for watching it, like their social media promos and such don't say it like that.
And like I said above, there really is no reason. If it's going on longer than 1 hour and people are still watching and they are still broadcasting, leave the drops on just to be good to your customers. But either way, I'm just asking for everything to be clear up front. I don't want to have to wait for the drops to be on, then drill down on twitch to see any fine print - it should be in every promo. Takes no more effort for them to say drops will be 3-4pm instead of just starting at 3pm.
Look, man, you get the reward for watching the stream. When the stream is over, the stream is over. If there is no stream, then there are no drops. Those 9 minutes still had drops going on, so that was lucky for the people who joined at 15:54, but nobody is entitled to drops if they joined too late and ZOS isn't obligated to keep the drops on if they are meant to be a reward for watching that stream.
Now it would obviously be better if they published a code during the stream with which you can redeem a crate within 24h of the stream as people from any timezone would be able to enjoy that, but if they put out these rules and then stick to them, I don't see how you can fault them for that. This is how every single ESO Live drop has worked in the past too.
Edit: Maybe I misread what you said. Were there or were there not drops after the hour was over? I joined late and got my drops so to me it looked like everything was normal.
When you look at https://www.twitch.tv/drops/campaigns , it gives the details for the drops. This particular campaign does say that it only lasts for one hour. I was late for the last one and the only consolation is that for the next "ESO Live at Home" stream, your counter will start at 66%. I'm not sure where you are seeing misleading advertisements, but checking this link will give you the campaign details and is standard for all Twitch drops.
When I see an ad on instagram or wherever that says, tune in for stream starting at 3pm est time and watch for 15 min for a drop and it doesn't say stops at 4pm est in the ad - it's misleading.
edit: and honestly, if the stream stops at 4, fine. But if it goes longer and they turn off drops just because, that's pretty crappy. (And having the conditions show up like that by digging down into details on the site doesn't really change what's available for you to see of the details on various places it's advertised) It should be clear if they are not trying to operate in a shady way. Hard to find fine print is used all too often for bad practices by businesses instead of just for legal protection and conditions. There is no reason they can't list the time clearly everywhere, nor is there any reason they can't just let it go until they are done broadcasting.
The stream didn't go longer than 4pm though did it? The stream went for exactly 1h 8minutes 35seconds and if it started at 3pm then it ended at 4.... That's exactly as it was advertised.
The only shady thing is that they didn't make it clear there would be additional drops to the ones that are currently going on.
You just pointed out what I already said, yea: it went 9 min over I said up above. Which means I watched the stream that started at 3pm for 22 minutes and didn't get a drop.
But as Aislinna pointed out, the details if you dig for them on twitch say between X time and Y time - but every reminder I saw from zos for watching it, like their social media promos and such don't say it like that.
And like I said above, there really is no reason. If it's going on longer than 1 hour and people are still watching and they are still broadcasting, leave the drops on just to be good to your customers. But either way, I'm just asking for everything to be clear up front. I don't want to have to wait for the drops to be on, then drill down on twitch to see any fine print - it should be in every promo. Takes no more effort for them to say drops will be 3-4pm instead of just starting at 3pm.
Look, man, you get the reward for watching the stream. When the stream is over, the stream is over. If there is no stream, then there are no drops. Those 9 minutes still had drops going on, so that was lucky for the people who joined at 15:54, but nobody is entitled to drops if they joined too late and ZOS isn't obligated to keep the drops on if they are meant to be a reward for watching that stream.
Now it would obviously be better if they published a code during the stream with which you can redeem a crate within 24h of the stream as people from any timezone would be able to enjoy that, but if they put out these rules and then stick to them, I don't see how you can fault them for that. This is how every single ESO Live drop has worked in the past too.
Edit: Maybe I misread what you said. Were there or were there not drops after the hour was over? I joined late and got my drops so to me it looked like everything was normal.
I think I'm not being clear yeah.
The stream wasn't over. I tuned in at like 13 min til and it went 9 over, I watched for 22 min total. It said 15 to earn a drop, but they stopped the drops from earning on the hour and they pointed out above that it showed the times on the drill down if you clicked through enough things on twitch and hunted the info down.
I was simply saying, pretty much what you were thinking - they should have just let it go to be cool and let anyone who missed the first part still earn if they were broadcasting anyway.
OR, in their ads, just said, it goes from 3-4 (instead of just starting at 3) so I knew not to bother trying to do it if I wasn't home soon enough before then. Sometimes their shows go longer, so I'd have no way of knowing ahead of time unless they tell me.
Twitch tells you the date, how long you need to watch, the channels and when they end. There isn't really anything to complain about when you have all of the info readily available to you and you didn't care to check and now complain about it like they've done something wrong. This is how drops have worked for a very long time.
SeaGtGruff wrote: »If the Twitch drops campaign listed specific starting and ending times, I don't know whether those can be updated on the fly or if they're programmed into Twitch and can't be changed.
Just because a stream goes on past the programmed ending time for the drops doesn't mean the drops will continue to be earnable after the programmed ending time.
Twitch tells you the date, how long you need to watch, the channels and when they end. There isn't really anything to complain about when you have all of the info readily available to you and you didn't care to check and now complain about it like they've done something wrong. This is how drops have worked for a very long time.
SeaGtGruff wrote: »If the Twitch drops campaign listed specific starting and ending times, I don't know whether those can be updated on the fly or if they're programmed into Twitch and can't be changed.
Just because a stream goes on past the programmed ending time for the drops doesn't mean the drops will continue to be earnable after the programmed ending time.
I wasn't told of any programmed end time. They just said stream starts at 3pm est.
SeaGtGruff wrote: »SeaGtGruff wrote: »If the Twitch drops campaign listed specific starting and ending times, I don't know whether those can be updated on the fly or if they're programmed into Twitch and can't be changed.
Just because a stream goes on past the programmed ending time for the drops doesn't mean the drops will continue to be earnable after the programmed ending time.
I wasn't told of any programmed end time. They just said stream starts at 3pm est.
I wasn't told anything about the stream or the drops-- or didn't read anything (didn't look).
But I tuned in when I got the notification about the stream going live (because I follow the channel). And when I saw that drops were active, I looked at the information about the drops campaign on the Twitch droos screen to see how long I had to watch. The drops campaign info listed the start/end dates/times for the campaign, as shown in the screenshot someone else posted in their reply.
All I'm saying-- or suggesting-- is that once the start/end dates/times of a drops campaign have been posted on Twitch, maybe it's not possible to change them on the fly after the fact? I honestly don't know how it works.
How do people who don’t live in the US and where 3pm eastern can be in the middle of the night supposed to get these extra drops? Are there more streams where this will happen or is it, as often the case with anything ESO related, tough luck if you live in another time zone?
The sense of entitlement is strong in this thread. So much fuss about a missed ouroboros crate...
How do people who don’t live in the US and where 3pm eastern can be in the middle of the night supposed to get these extra drops? Are there more streams where this will happen or is it, as often the case with anything ESO related, tough luck if you live in another time zone?
So aside from the whole promotion about watch so many hours to earn cat, costume, horse and causing a bunch of us that earned the cat and costume already in prior weeks to have to watch twitch for hours again to re-earn nothing (cat and costume we already had) in order to earn horse...
Today it was watch for 15 min to earn a drop. I tuned in late at about 13 til and was hoping it would be longer than an hour, which is was, it ran until about 9 min after. But it seems they turned drops off on the hour because my earnings stopped at 66% around that time and counted no more despite watching them all chat about the game and upcoming stuff the whole time.
Can we please be more clear about twitch drops in the future, if there are hard cut off times, or weird qualifications for drops. I'd love to not waste my time.
I think the issue really as ever is lack of clear communication from eso.
There probably is clearly defined rules on the drops. But are they easily, clearly displayed? I doubt it. Also from reading above they are rarely available in advance and then if so very shortly in advance etc ..
I agree if you watch a stream for 15 minutes it should count. The stream was lomger then the advertised 1 hour but the droos were set on a pre set timer. Its a free crate whatever with very little worth so why they screw people over with them is beyond me. Creating hostility like shown in this thread alone over a worthless to them free item to us.
Makes no logical sense ultimately