The only problem with that is that Asmongold does not stream exclusively WoW content, and hasn’t for awhile dedicated his streams strictly to WoW. From watching his streams, he plans to get level up his warrior, then warlock, (and maybe Paladin) and then quit until next round. He plays a variety of games and a good portion of his video content comes from youtube with reacts. He’ll be done with WoW in a week or less,and quit until the next round.
Oh you’re right. I guess multi-billion dollar company Blizzard can’t even figure out how to make deals with multiple streamers, and we should just let the problem fester because obviously it’s absolutely impossible to find any meaningful solution to any problem when you generate 8 billion dollars in revenue every year.
The topic has changed a bit.
It started out as a recommendation for a streamer specific server, which IMO is a great recommendation. We already have servers with specific tags to identify them. Throwing up a new “Streamer” tag seems logical and easy. I wouldn’t say they should proactively force streamers to use it, but if they become a problem at least then there would be a better reason to take action.
“Your content is interrupting too many other people’s gameplay. We have a dedicated server set up for your content for this specific reason.”
The other topic on if Streamers should be ignored by companies is dumb. Obviously you shouldn’t ignore free advertisement. And you shouldn’t make efforts to make that free advertisement a net negative instead of a net positive. Advocating that it’s bad or unfair for streamers with tens of thousands of viewers to be shown some extra effort from the service is ridiculous and being purposefully obtuse.
Lava Lash has been nice.
I’m enjoying Chaos Bolt, which feels just like 2019 Grobbulus.