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Why do we always have fake starting times for Twitch broadcasts?

Why do we always have fake starting times for Twitch livestreams?

If Twitter says 1pm, then the livestream should start at 1pm. If it’s going to be later, then just give us the real starting time.

Comments

  • MoZo
    MoZo Member Posts: 772
    edited October 24

    probably technical difficulties. ever since they switched their livestream space to their main hq recently they’ve been having a lot of technical problems. it’s live now though on twitch.

  • Coffeecrashing
    Coffeecrashing Member Posts: 5,672

    I’m on Twitch, and I just see STARTING SOON. And I checked a streamer, and his screen says STARTING SOON too.

  • MoZo
    MoZo Member Posts: 772

    yeah they usually do 5-10 mins of “starting soon” to make sure people get in and don’t miss out right away. it’s a shame the stream started late because we are almost 20 mins into the initial start time but at least it’ll start soon.

  • Vorahk08
    Vorahk08 Member Posts: 346

    This time, I think it's technical difficulties. The stream is only and Twitch and nowhere to be found on YouTube.

  • Coffeecrashing
    Coffeecrashing Member Posts: 5,672

    During the livestream, it was implied there were issues trying to get the stream working on YouTube, which caused the delay.

  • tes
    tes Member Posts: 1,223

    Currently in some countries Amazon servers(Twitch specifically) and YouTube as well encountered many server issues

    I don’t know about situation in Canada and USA, but when I watched live twichcon of streamer from there, it was really bad. Tho it was days ago

  • Nun_So_Vile
    Nun_So_Vile Member Posts: 2,809
    edited October 25

    Took the words right out of my mouth (literally). I acknowledge the technical issues, but completely unprofessional at many levels as a company of their size to not to have a support team that has that ironed out so things are ready to go live on-time. It gave off a very unserious image.

  • Nazzzak
    Nazzzak Member Posts: 7,344

    If their intent is to start at the given time but a technical difficulty or other mishap means they can't, then it's not "false." It's just a delay. You can always watch the VOD later if the delay is inconvenient for you.

  • Coffeecrashing
    Coffeecrashing Member Posts: 5,672

    This isn't the first time this has happened though. Sometimes the stream is supposed to start, and we get a 30 minute countdown timer instead.

    And if there is a major delay because of a technical difficulty, they could have communicated that on Twitter, or switch the stream to a sign saying "technical difficulties, please wait", instead of just having people sit there for 20 minutes wondering what is happening.

  • AbsolutGrndZer0
    AbsolutGrndZer0 Member Posts: 1,849

    You obviously don't watch much Twitch. When you go live, Twitch sends out a notification. With exception of your most dedicated regulars, nobody is just sitting there while you are offline waiting for you. So, they need a few minutes to wrap up what they were doing, get Twitch open, etc. Nearly every streamer that has been streaming for any significant amount of time does a "Starting Soon" screen for about 5-10 minutes to let people arrive, so they don't miss too much.

  • AbsolutGrndZer0
    AbsolutGrndZer0 Member Posts: 1,849
    edited October 27

    You don't know you are going to have technical difficulties until you log in. If you and I set up to play some games together at 10pm, if I log in at 10pm and my computer is suddenly crashing, are you going to say I am being unprofessional because I didn't fix my computer crashing beforehand?

  • Coffeecrashing
    Coffeecrashing Member Posts: 5,672

    If you were a professional game company, that was literally making a stream to show your customers that you are competent and capable of making good plans for the future, then I would expect you to log in BEFORE the stream's starting time, to fix any issues that might occur.

    Like for reals, log in before the stream starts, and check if the audio and visuals work. And make sure no one's microphone is doing some weird echo thing.

  • AbsolutGrndZer0
    AbsolutGrndZer0 Member Posts: 1,849
    edited October 28

    Yes, but sometimes something can go wrong that you did not foresee.

    We don't know that it was a hardware failure. One common problem I see streamers have often is that their OBS updated right before they got on stream and now it's broken. It doesn't happen very often, but it happens. When it does happen, yes it very much does just magically break over night. Bugs and stuff in software used by streamers is completely different than hardware.

    Plus, what is this nonsense that crashing is only ever a hardware issue? More often than not, it's a software issue. You may be in the computer industry, but it's obvious what END you are on. You seem to know nothing about the software end.

  • AbsolutGrndZer0
    AbsolutGrndZer0 Member Posts: 1,849

    I would like to say most of us understand, but… this thread seems to indicate otherwise.