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/jp/ - Otaku Culture

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>> No.34648625 [View]
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34648625

>>34648600
>Am I gay?
Worse

Werecome to ze Famuree!

>> No.24894834 [View]
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24894834

Towa!

>> No.24810719 [View]
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24810719

>>24810707

>> No.24804019 [View]
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24804019

>>24803877
There are rare cases where people will tell you to not speak English but just ignore them. All the holos are English friendly. Just follow the rules and you'll do fine.

Don't chat before the stream starts. Just say Hello to the streamer or excited for the stream or something else simple like that. The Towa example is Kenzoku say "Towaiting" and usually include a member emoji if they are one. Other holos have similar traditions. After you watch a few streams you can pick up what it is for your holo.

Once the stream starts focus on talking to the streamer and not to the other viewers. That doesn't mean that you can't talk to the chat and all enjoy the stream together, but it means don't have a multi part conversation across everyone else trying to enjoy the stream. It annoys other viewers and most importantly, the streamer will be periodically scanning the chat to try to interact with viewers and it's extremely confusing to see the middle of a conversation between two other people and be unsure if the comment was directed at them. Tagging can help here. If you see someone ask a question you know the answer to, you can tag them with @<username> and that makes it very clear that response was for them and not the streamer. Still though don't have a conversation, a single response is probably enough and then focus back on the streamer.

Depending on the level of English skill for the given streamer, you should alter your messages accordingly. If you're in a Korone, Coco, Towa or Haato stream, you can write a bit more but keep in mind they're reading the chat flying by so simple is always best. For the others it's best to just cheer them on or give very simple short statements that they might be able to understand. The best and easiest way you can contribute is just encouraging the streamer (Very good! Nice job! Good work! Ganbare! Kanpai!). Don't try to have a one on one moment with them. That's not the point of the streams.

Don't mention other streamers unless they've already come up in the course of the stream. i.e. Don't say "Hey Aki you should get Roboco to come on and go tame more owls together" but if the streamer is already talking about the person then it's fine. Also if the streamer asks for suggestions then you're free to mention them like when Marine asks for suggestions of who to draw in her art streams. In addition to not mentioning other streamers, don't mention real life events or anything that's sad / depressing. The point of the stream is for everyone to have a positive time together so leave that shit out.

If you see someone who isn't following the rules, just ignore them. Don't get in a fight with them about the rules because that just causes more problems. You can politely suggest to people to check the rules or a specific corrective action but don't argue with them. If it's really bad use YouTubes report / block features and if enough people do it they'll get auto moderated.

>> No.24729775 [View]
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24729775

>>24729757
Right, we love Towa

>> No.24645959 [View]
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24645959

Tenshi

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