Originally Posted by John "TotalBiscuit" Bain
If the Japanese have proven anything lately, it’s that they do not understand gaming videos on YouTube. If the Shining Force incident proved anything, if this proves anything, then what you are clearly seeing is a culture that is out of touch with the realities of YouTube—out of the realities of streaming and things like that. […] I believe the total views for pieces of Square Enix content on my channel at this time, not counting the multi-part stuff of Final Fantasy XIII-2, is 2.1 million. Million! Do you hear that? —million! Do you know how many viewers there’s going to be for Final Fantasy XIV on my channel? ZERO! Because it’s not getting covered.
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If people are put off buying your game because they could just watch it instead, then your game is very clearly not engaging enough from a mechanical standpoint. If I can experience all the game has to offer by just watching a video with someone chatting over the background, then that probably means that your game is not that exciting, and you need to be having just a little bit of luck how you designed it. If you make your games engaging, people will want to play them after seeing somebody else play them; if you don’t, that’s your fault! If you’re arguing that, say long-form video content that shows large chunks of your game is somehow detracting from the audience of your game rather than increasing it, I would love to see your evidence—I really really would. Please, show me anything other than correlation and conjecture. Oh, you want proof of the contrary you say? Oh, that shouldn’t be a problem, I’ve got three years of that stuff—bring it on!