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curl-6 said:
Mummelmann said:

I don't see following virtual girls being any worse than worshiping and throwing money at "real" girls whose job consists of being attractive and sitting in front of a camera, showing their cleavage and being mediocre at playing video games.

To be fair, I don't think this applies any less to male influencers, except instead of showing cleavage they just act like a 12 year old on camera while playing garbage overrated games.

Absolutely so, I can't stand that style of "influencer" or streamer at all. The main difference in this instance though is that female streamers play a lot more on sexuality, and the protests against virtual girls seem to revolve mainly around legitimizing "real" female streamers. In other words; people are upset or feel threatened that made up, rendered people might make it more difficult to make money off of your face and body online. To me, that just tastes kind of foul, being childish and loud is hard to compare to playing almost solely on your looks and sexuality. What the two groups have in common though is that they help perpetuate stereotypes about a hobby already fraught with stigma; that girls don't really care about gaming and just want attention and that boys who play games are immature and perhaps a bit of a dick.