1:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

I HATE THESE ANIMATIONS #shorts #vtuberって動画が話題らしいぞ

2:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

3:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

俺の名はダシオ!今はマグロ漁船にのっている

4:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

いまきた 説明文ないの?どこー

5:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

なんでこういう動画が伸びるのかマジで理解できない

6:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

なんだかんだでいい動画となっているんでないかい。

7:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

This is description

source:
HE CAME BACK TO HELP! ♥ *INSPIRING STORY* #shorts

**WHY DO YOU LOOK LIKE THAT?**
A VTuber (ブイチューバー, BuiChūbā), or virtual YouTuber (Japanese: バーチャルユーチューバー, Hepburn: bācharu YūChūbā), is an online entertainer who uses a virtual avatar generated using computer graphics. Real-time motion capture software or technology are often—but not always—used to capture movement. The digital trend originated in Japan in the mid-2010s, and has become an international online phenomenon in the early 2020s.[1] A majority of VTubers are English and Japanese-speaking YouTubers or live streamers who use avatar designs. By 2020, there were more than 10,000 active VTubers.[2] Although the term is an allusion to the video platform YouTube, they also use websites such as Niconico, Twitch, Facebook, Twitter, and Bilibili.

The first entertainer to use the phrase "virtual YouTuber", Kizuna AI, began creating content on YouTube in late 2016. Her popularity sparked a VTuber trend in Japan, and spurred the establishment of specialized agencies to promote them, including major ones such as Hololive Production, Nijisanji, and VShojo. Fan translations and foreign-language VTubers have marked a rise in the trend's international popularity.[3] Virtual YouTubers have appeared in domestic advertising campaigns, and have broken livestream-related world records.

8:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

>>7 おつおつ

9:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

>>7 おつかれ。いつもありがと

10:名無しさん@お腹いっぱい2023.02.03(Fri)

>>7 ありがとう

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