I have been thinking about writing for a long time. The recent discussions about girl streamers on Twitch and my own personal frustrations have led to me starting this blog. I apologize in advance if some of you see this post as overly negative but it is just the state of my mind lately.
I have been streaming for over a year now and the hardest part has been not giving up. You would get the super highs that would make you feel on top of the world and the major lows where you think of never streaming again. This will be no surprise to my viewers but lately I've been in a slump. This is because of a variety of reasons. Namely, I'm under a lot of personal stress and I've had trouble seeing improvement in my own game play. When you feel like your stream is growing slowly or "dying" you search for reasons why you are inadequate or what you are doing wrong. You also look to other streams and wonder how they are growing faster than you, why they have more positive support...etc etc etc... It is easy to get lost in what your stream should be instead of being yourself. It is hard not to notice that the community often values the size of your boobs or how much skin is showing, rather than what your game knowledge is or how much you care about the community. There have been times where I considered "selling out" to help my stream grow faster and build a larger community. My ultimate goal was to make friends in DotA and maybe have the opportunity to meet some of the pro players and other big names in the scene, so I felt like how the community viewed me was very important. Maybe this is naive thinking.
On those days where I felt inadequate and saw certain kinds of streams growing while I struggled, I questioned why it was so important for me to remain true to who I am as a person. What was more important to me? Being myself or building my stream? Every time someone came into my stream and compared to me someone else, it hurt me more than I cared to admit. Twitch creates this illusion that if you do not have the viewers and followers then you are not interesting enough or good enough. I'm sure this is especially hard on women as our looks are a huge part of whether we get viewers or not. Mostly I am just disappointed. I thought after I demonstrated my love for the game and showed my true self that more people would embrace my stream and me as a person. Unfortunately, streaming has left me feeling inadequate.
Early on in my streaming, I thought it would be a great idea to make friends with other girl streamers and build a network where we could all grow together. I have been lucky enough to meet a few great girls (who I can't wait to meet at TI5). But I have also experienced some behind the scenes sabotage and drama. There was a time where I would host people regularly trying to support their stream and grow together. Unfortunately this opinion was not shared by everyone I supported so now I limit my open encouragement to people who have been genuine friends to me. I think this is really sad. In an environment where women are already getting harassed by the community we should be trying to buoy each other up and be strong together instead of tearing each other down. I'm still searching for those people.
I want to just end this post with that. I have lots more "musings" for you guys down the road. I will try to post semi-regularly and maybe you guys will have the chance to see the real Mackenzie.
"I thought after I demonstrated my love for the game and showed my true self that more people would embrace my stream and me as a person."
ReplyDeleteThis made me sad. I hope you realize that what keeps many of us regular viewers coming back is your personality and your passion for Dota! I think it's important to figure out what YOU want to get out of the stream and not to compare yourself to others, especially when most of them create alternate personas who aren't even close to their normal personality. Unfortunately on Twitch, the people who get lots of viewers are people with these fake personalities, but I'd bet that most of them haven't made as many close friends with people from the community as you have.
Stay strong! Embrace that personality :)
-Trip
Actually, besides pros and casters your stream is the only one that I really watch. I watch it exactly because you are passionate about the game and playing well. I started casting last summer for close to the same reasons. I'm HUGELY passionate about the game. I love how much depth it has and how hard you have to work to be good at it. I like that every game is different and I like that I have to think on my feet to have good games. It's like chess meets competitive sports. Unfortunately, none of my friends are big gamers and I've never been able to find a group of people that were as passionate about gaming as I am. It's fun to chat with people that share your passion.
ReplyDeleteStreaming is tough because a large chunk of the Twitch community is toxic. I tried watching the TI Qualifiers and left Twitch chat open and it was just a cesspool. I closed it and enjoyed the matches much more. If you're streaming, you really can't get away from that because the Twitch community is your audience. So I guess you have to decide if you want to have a smaller stream with the "nice" portion of the Twitch community that appreciates the game and your passion for it or do you want to have a larger stream and have to deal with the cancerous part of the community.
I think the best way to answer that is to decide what will make you happy and ALWAYS go with that decision. Don't judge your worth on the number of people that watch on any given day. Judge it based on the effort that you put in to making the stream that you want. If 40 people watch but they're 40 people that share your love of the game and your efforts to get better at it, I think that's better than 200 people that are going to treat you like a softcore camgirl.
I appreciate what you do. Keep doing it because you love it :)
-Dave/Vinceclortho
1/10 was expecting blog about Dagon Antimage. L O L
ReplyDeleteIn all seriousness though, I enjoy your streams. You are among the only girls who take this game seriously which is what i enjoy. Same reason i watch julies. It's genuine gameplay and love for the game. It does suck that viewers tend to go for the girls who are more.. skin flaunting and "perky". #roadto4k
Very interesting read,
ReplyDeleteI had wondered if wanting viewers and sub and all that was stressful, because it seemed like it. I myself wanted to stream but was too afraid to be boring or just plain ignored. I want to think im a think skinned person but i dont know that i would be able to deal with the toxicity of the dota community on top of twitch. Its unfortunate that the most vocal people are often the most toxic, and they just want to go around explaining why they are better and why they think you shit, like get a life. I'm glad that you are able to move past and keep going every time you have thought about just calling it quits. I also wish things like sub days were more fun for you, in theory the should work but, in practice as we have all seen, not so much. Inhouses should be goofy fun but it is taken too seriously by some and way too not serious by others making it a shit show. Well thats my two cents, hope you keep these up and looking forward to your next stream as always.
-Q
I have been a viewer for nearly a year now. What have seen so far from the stream is you transitioning from one place to another consistently. Not only was your environment changing, you as a person seems to change as well.
ReplyDeleteWhat made me first join your stream was your big smile from the thumbnail down in the DOTA 2 page. I fell in love with your stream because I thought you were goofy and passionate.
As the months pass, your attitude began to shift towards the negative side. From what I've read, I could see that the stress, betrayal, and the viewers have put you down. For a long time, I thought you were struggling with finding who you were because your behavior changed so much during a short period of time. This blog reveals that you were just changing to attract viewers.
I just wish that you could go back in the old days, stress-free, no rank games to worry about, and be happy with friends while streaming.