Your first sentence, as bolded by me, refers only to a subset of the community. As such, every subsequent point you make relates only to that same subset. None of it relates to the whole community, or the overall state of the game.
Games that excite people have active content creation, whether or not you or your subset of the community engage with it at all. Games that do not excite people do not have vibrant content creation scenes. Games that excite people draw in more people than they lose. Games that do not excite people cease being profitable as they lose more than they gain or retain.
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »
Games that excite people have active content creation, whether or not you or your subset of the community engage with it at all. Games that do not excite people do not have vibrant content creation scenes. Games that excite people draw in more people than they lose. Games that do not excite people cease being profitable as they lose more than they gain or retain.
See, this is what I find hard to comprehend - if I'm "excited" about a game, I'll play it. Why would I ever want to watch some random extrovert online crack wise while playing a game? And how does my liking Game A have anything to do with that?
...and doesn't viewership of some streamer say "I really like Streamer X" not "I really like the game Streamer X is playing"?
(I've also never had anything else on while I'm playing a game - no TV in the background, no twitch, no music. I'm playing the game, why would I distract myself with other stuff. Or I'd not really be 'watching' that TV show or twitch stream if I'm concentrating on the game. So "I've got 500 hours watching streams in the background while playing ESO" is just totally nonsensical. It's a false statistic, like leaving a game running while you're doing other things - you don't actually have any of that playtime.)
Streamers are a reflection of the community. The number of people streaming and watching streams for a game are reflective of the number of people actually playing. Online games without an active streaming/content creation presence tend to be smaller, less relevant games.
I don't feel ESO is a very live stream friendly game, as most of it is not very exciting to watch. For me, in the exciting category is PVP, an activity that can be enjoyable to watch even if the streamer is not very engaging themselves. So, I can watch a depressed, negative streamer play PVP if they keep it moving and are good, but I will not watch them do writs for an hour making me feel like I'm on suicide watch.
Twitch live streaming seemed to bear this out, PVP/action streams tend to have higher viewership/followings then streamers doing less action oriented activities like questing, fishing, dailies, etc. And many PVP streamers have stopped playing/streaming given the current state of bad performance for PVP, so yes, Twitch viewership is down, but for me that doesn't lessen my interest in playing the actual game, nor do I think it means the game is "dying".
Compared to other games, ESO viewership numbers are abysmally low, because outside of PvP or really strong raid teams (and even those don't generate impressive numbers), it's really not that interesting watching someone pick flowers or do quests/writs (as much as I enjoy doing those things myself). The people who stream this game do it because they love this game, for better or for worse, and they want this game to succeed. If all they wanted was viewers, they'd have left a long time ago.
deadpool3431 wrote: »Sawman only has 17k subs. What does he know?
https://youtu.be/Z5UAVDMDMMI HappyTheCamper wrote: »Nefas just posted a really good video summarizing a conversation he and the stream team had with the devs & community managers. Might be worth looking at.https://youtu.be/Z5UAVDMDMMI
HappyTheCamper wrote: »Nefas just posted a really good video summarizing a conversation he and the stream team had with the devs & community managers. Might be worth looking at.https://youtu.be/Z5UAVDMDMMI
This was a really informational video done by nefas highlighting the pain points the players have been feeling, and zos themselves listening to feedback on.
Nefas even goes into detail about how "they're well aware" of their retention issues as well as other pain points and want feedback to make the game better.
Kind of pokes a hole in that whole "doing it for clicks" POV since the devs see the same writing everyone else sees. If you've had doubts, you SHOULD watch this.
Pepegrillos wrote: »The ship (viewership) is sinking and many of them can't make it on different twitch directories/covering other games. Negative content about their main game is still content and draws clicks.
But if the viewer numbers decline, doesnt that mean that players are less interested in a game and therefore the game is dying ? as far as i can tell less and less players are interested in the game. Lost dephts (u35) is a pretty accurate description of my friendlists and guilds and it hasnt gotten any better with u36.
Turtle_Bot wrote: »HappyTheCamper wrote: »Nefas just posted a really good video summarizing a conversation he and the stream team had with the devs & community managers. Might be worth looking at.https://youtu.be/Z5UAVDMDMMI
This was a really informational video done by nefas highlighting the pain points the players have been feeling, and zos themselves listening to feedback on.
Nefas even goes into detail about how "they're well aware" of their retention issues as well as other pain points and want feedback to make the game better.
Kind of pokes a hole in that whole "doing it for clicks" POV since the devs see the same writing everyone else sees. If you've had doubts, you SHOULD watch this.
Just look at the numbers for games like minecraft, fortnight, COD, BF, DotA, League, etc compared to ESO. All of those other games get insane viewer numbers that eso content creators could only dream of even during the best of times, yet the content creators are still doing eso content and have only really branched out within the past month or so due to the game itself becoming barely playable for how they enjoy playing the game.
Speaking as someone who is friends with some of those streamers, I can tell you that the frustration you're seeing in there is very much real. I know it's simpler to attribute it to them being click-hungry drama queens, but they play the game as much if not more than you or I, and they're real people feeling genuine frustration that the community they care so much about isn't doing well.
Compared to other games, ESO viewership numbers are abysmally low, because outside of PvP or really strong raid teams (and even those don't generate impressive numbers), it's really not that interesting watching someone pick flowers or do quests/writs (as much as I enjoy doing those things myself). The people who stream this game do it because they love this game, for better or for worse, and they want this game to succeed. If all they wanted was viewers, they'd have left a long time ago.
So basically ESO is more a game to be enjoyed by playing other than something that is fun to watch others play. The player population is still healthy. What the players do while in the game has shifted some but still a good number playing.
That's not at all what I said. As I said, the parts of the game that people actually enjoy watching on stream are NOT doing well, and populations are down significantly in those parts. I'm genuinely glad you haven't seen any changes to your chosen part of the game, but many of the rest of us weren't so lucky. I would ask for a bit of empathy, understanding, and open-minded listening when members of the community voice their very real concerns.
Pepegrillos wrote: »Pepegrillos wrote: »The ship (viewership) is sinking and many of them can't make it on different twitch directories/covering other games. Negative content about their main game is still content and draws clicks.
But if the viewer numbers decline, doesnt that mean that players are less interested in a game and therefore the game is dying ? as far as i can tell less and less players are interested in the game. Lost dephts (u35) is a pretty accurate description of my friendlists and guilds and it hasnt gotten any better with u36.Turtle_Bot wrote: »HappyTheCamper wrote: »Nefas just posted a really good video summarizing a conversation he and the stream team had with the devs & community managers. Might be worth looking at.https://youtu.be/Z5UAVDMDMMI
This was a really informational video done by nefas highlighting the pain points the players have been feeling, and zos themselves listening to feedback on.
Nefas even goes into detail about how "they're well aware" of their retention issues as well as other pain points and want feedback to make the game better.
Kind of pokes a hole in that whole "doing it for clicks" POV since the devs see the same writing everyone else sees. If you've had doubts, you SHOULD watch this.
Just look at the numbers for games like minecraft, fortnight, COD, BF, DotA, League, etc compared to ESO. All of those other games get insane viewer numbers that eso content creators could only dream of even during the best of times, yet the content creators are still doing eso content and have only really branched out within the past month or so due to the game itself becoming barely playable for how they enjoy playing the game.
Content creators can't just jump to another game and instantly gain viewers in a proportion that reflects whichever viewership that game has. Multiple ESO content creators have tried and failed. But it's not just ESO content creators. Changing games is risky, partly because your established viewers might not like the new game, so it's almost like starting anew. So, although it might look like ESO content creators are doing a 'favor' to the game by sticking with it, in most cases is a matter of necessity.
HappyTheCamper wrote: »Nefas just posted a really good video summarizing a conversation he and the stream team had with the devs & community managers. Might be worth looking at.https://youtu.be/Z5UAVDMDMMI
colossalvoids wrote: »There were people outside those two groups you particularly target every time, so relax.
HappyTheCamper wrote: »Nefas just posted a really good video summarizing a conversation he and the stream team had with the devs & community managers. Might be worth looking at.
Kingsindarkness wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »There were people outside those two groups you particularly target every time, so relax.
70 Stream team members how many represent those who don't Raid or PVP? ...Who didn't get a word in edgewise by his own admission, and it really still doesn't account for anything else I mentioned...
Sit back and let the "Vets" handle it never ends well.
Agree, now lots of them are also pissed about the U-35 nerfs and the U-36 block bugs for very understandable reasons.alternatelder wrote: »All of them do it for clicks. They always spew nonsense at this time of year. Kinda like the ridiculous "should you play ESO in '20,' 21, '22..."
Kingsindarkness wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »There were people outside those two groups you particularly target every time, so relax.
70 Stream team members how many represent those who don't Raid or PVP? ...Who didn't get a word in edgewise by his own admission, and it really still doesn't account for anything else I mentioned...
Sit back and let the "Vets" handle it never ends well.
Kingsindarkness wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »There were people outside those two groups you particularly target every time, so relax.
70 Stream team members how many represent those who don't Raid or PVP? ...Who didn't get a word in edgewise by his own admission, and it really still doesn't account for anything else I mentioned...
Sit back and let the "Vets" handle it never ends well.
Pepegrillos wrote: »
Content creators can't just jump to another game and instantly gain viewers in a proportion that reflects whichever viewership that game has. Multiple ESO content creators have tried and failed. But it's not just ESO content creators. Changing games is risky, partly because your established viewers might not like the new game, so it's almost like starting anew. So, although it might look like ESO content creators are doing a 'favor' to the game by sticking with it, in most cases is a matter of necessity.