This is just my conclusion and I don't think he's lying though... I thought about this because the 1st guy was explaining about the recommendation thing
funnily enough ive done with IRL idols as a fan of akb48, it's actually more fun than it would seem cause after knowing that you have someone they would get jealous and try super hard to take you away and becomes an inside joke between the of you. assuming you meet at least semi regularly to the point they recognize you
I like how the other's guy like "Man, Lifeline, you just had to be the honest, upright guy huh? Fine fine, it's good it's good. I'm out, you fix this." wwwwwwwwwwwww
Those guys were super chill though. Just genuinely happy to play with her but they didn't get distracted, didn't freak out, didn't bombard her with questions or try to get her attention. Just let her do her thing, give a solid and entertaining answer when asked a question by her but also kept it short. Very cool.
The only time I've ever "interacted" with any Hololive talents is one time in Apex .. by noticing that I found Moona and Ollie's Deathbox. I figured out "eh probably wannabe's" During a downtime I checked their stream and they were indeed streaming and they indeed died on that spot there lmao
I joined the same game with Roboco a few time and got on stream once. And that time I killed her with the Mastiff(ign Robosa) :( she was playing with FBK. Tried many time but never got in the same team
idk if this is true, but i heard there is this shitty thing about streaming if someone (the other person that is teaming up with the streamer) talks through voice chat about controversial/racist/very very bad thing (ex. saying the N word) the blame is on the streamer (could cause a ban or something on the streamer) and i think that is why most hololive members and other vtuber streamers that is associated with an organization usually mute their party members voice chat to avoid that issue
They seem pretty chill which is nice, I thought they're gonna be like those two guys that Matsuri talked about that asked about the color of her underwear.
They actually made me want to check out Holostars; something about the male Japanese voice sounds interesting to me. Also yes, the way they kept their distance was really nice. Didn't pressure her with questions or comments of any kind, spoke when spoken to.
I'm pretty sure the very great majority of people are chill, especially when it's just randos in an Apex game. When it comes to meet and greets, you get those... really dedicated fans... more often.
There are 2 type of man in apex when Matsuri Asking their Fav Girl in Hololive. 1st:Will say "Of course its you " when his room full of Towa or Aqua Picture's. 2nd: "Roboco-san."
0:48 This Pretty much help clears the misconception about multiplayer voice chatting with the Hololive girls. I've seen fans speculated that it's to do with "doxxing" for some reason. But nah, Ig it depends on them if they wanna communicate or what not. I would love to have that chance but I dont know japanese lol Matsuri seems like a pretty cool person to talk to.
I also think there are probably other considerations too, such as letting teammates' focus on the game and not the idol, avoiding the risk of NG topics being asked/talked about or being "fair" to their fans (since if this was a regular thing other people would want their turn on VC too).
Really depends on how confident the hologirl is with holding a conversation with a random and how much they trust their fans as seen on how matsuri and towa handle voice chat in apex...while on the other end of the spectrum we got the introverts like rushia ayame and aqua.
@@retnemmoc101 With "other people" do you mean other Hololive members? I don't think the problem is Hololive members all wanting to voice chat fans, but the overall implications. For example, if a Hololive member regularly voice chatted in a game, it would change the focus from watching them just play the game into the fan "meet and greets", possibly make it feel unfair for fans who watch the stream but don't play the game. Overall talking directly to your idol might be something people hold special value, which regular talking might cheapen. There was a "meet" and greet (talk) event recently for which people paid money. Western thinking probably might be like "toxic idol culture scram", but deep down these details do affect the experience and how fans feel.
well, considering that the talents are a bunch of introverts (some even scared with male), and the fans might give a bad feedback, it's more to the streaming circumstances rather than the company policy at this point lol
@@ronaldt2339 don't generalize it, yh some of them are introverts but not the rest, don't lump them together into "bunch of introverts" and mostly it has nothing to do with being introvert ot extrovert, even extrovert streamers would have their preservations to talk freely with fans on voice chat, as u don't know who are u talking to exactly or what topics they may start asking u about or what statements they would suddenly say, so they don't prefer to do it overall not just the introverts ones.
I like how Matsuri is being real with chat and saying that the guys reactions are normal, and saying chat would do the same thing, its a little thing, but nice nonetheless
Man, this makes me remember that time I got into a same BanDori room with an indie I supported. Granted, I flunked that song big time trying to take multiple screenshots
That went better than expected. The dudes were reasonably excited but didn't do anything annoying or inappropriate, and Matsuri handled it like a pro (of course, basing it only on what I could see in this clip). Is it the beginning of Tee Tee moments between idols and fans?
One guy was religious and believed in God. The other believed more in the power of science and the glorious advancement of technology, particularly the development of a super high-spec robot
This hardly seems that awkward to me. I wish the times I'd call awkward were only this bad. Everyone seemed pretty friendly and not having both have her being their favorite makes things less awkward if you ask me, and getting to say it's actually Roboco and not her was probably funny for everyone. If he had felt pressured to lie and say Matsuri was also his favorite I'd say that would be awkward.
If this was the standard sort of reaction from meeting streamers in voice comms, they could have them on all the time during Apex Streams and it'd be entertaining as hell. Sadly, even if you reach a pretty high skill bracket in this game, you're gonna run into 15 year old children, not-15 year old manchildren, people who hate streamers, people who are too awkward to exist in voice comms, etc. Nevermind the fact that if they started regularly paying attention to voice comms, it attracts those who want that attention who'll then be aggressively stream sniping... and the people who want that attention are certainly not like these two chill dudes.
Matsuri: Ah, it can't be helped, if I met an idol like me I'd go crazy too right?... Listener: I'd treat you respectfully like any other perso- Matsuri: Wait no
Lifeline stared her down and said "I'm an atheist" staying true to Roboco like he was hearing her say Hallo-boo directly to him in the middle of the match
Last time I met a streamer in a game I just said "ah fuck well here goes my win streak" because said streamer was one of the top players and we ended up getting absolutely fucking rolled.