Category Archives: Twitch

Make a video, win an all-access Purple Ticket to TwitchCon!

Win the dream Twitch trip in 3 easy steps!

Do you love Twitch? Want to celebrate video games and broadcasting at the ultimate Twitch convention? You’re in luck, because we’re bringing back last year’s Purple Ticket contest, bigger and better than ever!

Twitch is offering to fly out one special fan (and their friend) to San Diego with an all-access pass (that means VIP party access, meet and greets with top broadcasters, tour of the event with Twitch staff, & more!) for TwitchCon, but we want to learn more about you before we pick somebody. Here’s the challenge: Continue reading Make a video, win an all-access Purple Ticket to TwitchCon!

Twitch introduces ‘Cheering’ emotes for tipping streamers

The company wants a piece of the market.

Twitch, the popular game-streaming site, has a funding problem. Not related to the company — it’s owned by Amazon and is just fine — but its streamers. Like on other video platforms, creators are paid based on ad views and subscriptions, and by all accounts not at a very high rate. While popular streamers make a living — helped in part by sponsorship deals and the like — it can be hard for smaller channels to make ends meet. That’s why the sub-economy of donations and tips exists, and today, Twitch is trying to formalize that economy with a new feature it calls “Cheering.” Continue reading Twitch introduces ‘Cheering’ emotes for tipping streamers

The Road to TwitchCon 2016: Call for Content & First Featured Broadcasters

TwitchCon 2016 is now only six months away! That means it’s time to start sharing news and updates as we all head down the road to TwitchCon together. Just make sure to buckle your seat belts because we have a lot in store for you this year. Like what, you ask? Well, let’s start with…

Call for Content

Starting today, we are opening our official TwitchCon 2016 call for content. So if you have a great idea for a workshop, panel, or presentation, we want to hear from you! Just slide over to twitchcon.com where you can submit your awesome ideas. This year, Twitch Creative will have a much larger presence at the show with panels, an expanded gallery, and more planned. For all you creative types out there, this is a great chance to submit your ideas. Continue reading The Road to TwitchCon 2016: Call for Content & First Featured Broadcasters

Twitch Talks Community, Support, and Women in Tech at Bay Area Girl Geek Dinner

Here’s something you already knew: things still suck for women working in tech. That happens to go double for women working in the games industry. Such was the topic at this panel discussion, held at Twitch’s San Francisco headquarters, where their entire dining area (which is huge, even by tech office standards) was packed to the brim with women interested in changing tech’s toxic status quo.

This panel at Twitch was part of an independent event series called “Bay Area Girl Geek Dinners,” which aims to bring together women who work in tech. Representatives of Twitch sat on this particular panel, and shared some insight about their working environment, how they got to where they are, and the impact online streaming has on forming support communities.

When it comes to being a prominent figure in gaming or tech, there’s a significant pressure around being a representative for all women. While you and I both know that women are not a monolith, that’s an idea that has yet to disseminate across the majority of the internet.

Twitch Programming Manager and broadcast partner Anna Prosser Robinson touched on this idea when she shared a personal story about a time in which she wanted to give up on streaming altogether. She said she remembered hitting a rough patch and thinking, “I have to hold the torch for everybody else.” She also mentioned there’s no easy answer to how to handle conflicts and incidents of harassment, but one key thing has kept her going through all of the junk: her support network. Sometimes all it takes is a simple reminder from a friend or loved one to tell you “we need you, we want you here,” she said.

But how does one find a support network? For Malina Das, it took venturing out into real life to find a community. Finding an in-person community takes away from the anonymity of the internet that so often lends to people’s ability to harass and abuse. Sometimes, it’s just harder to be a troll when you can put a name to a face. She also mentions the Team Fortress 2 community as it is now. According to her, it’s grown since its inception way back in 2007. While there are still pockets of terrible places, on the whole, it’s a community that’s come a long way.

Robinson also shared some immensely helpful advice on how to find support. She mentioned that it’s often best to find smaller communities, places where one can speak to other people and, in turn, get to know them better. But to find smaller communities, she suggests looking at larger communities, like large groups on Facebook that are made up of mostly women in tech. Joining one of those groups then finding the gamers within it is one way of forming a smaller, more tightly knit community.

In a lot of ways, the dinner reflected Robinson’s advice: a large community comprised of women in tech, distilled into the smaller ad hoc community present there that night. It’s my belief that these meetups go beyond simple networking; they’re opportunities for women to find support for themselves outside of who they might typically meet at any other tech mixer.

Twitch, in particular, is an intriguing case study in how to grow communities. If the panelists involved in the discussion that night are indicative of the types of attitude shared amongst all Twitch employees–and this definitely seems to be the case–then Twitch might one day stand as one of the better places for women to gather and find community.

Don’t get me wrong: Twitch has had its share of problems and missteps, but so it goes for most large internet websites. It’s quite evident that they’re doing their best to improve things, which, to put it frankly, is more than one can say about Facebook or Twitter. And like I said: if this panel is representative of the sentiments across all of Twitch’s employees, then I’ve got a pretty good feeling about its future as a place for people to truly gather.

As for the Bay Area Geek Girl Dinners? If nothing else, this dinner and its incredibly healthy attendance represents the growing number of women who are determined to find ways of changing the narrative around working in tech. It’s important that one doesn’t make the mistake of thinking that things are the way they are for lack of trying, because there are plenty of people who are trying their best to make a positive change in their industries.

What I’m hoping for in the future is a shift in discussion topics–that we don’t have to talk about the harassment and abuse that comes with being a woman on the internet, that these issues become a thing of the past. But we’re far from that point, and it’s at meetups and dinners and groups like these where the ideas and seeds for change get planted.

I guess what I’m trying to say is that I’m so glad that this group exists, as it helps renew my excitement and hopes for the future.

Originally posted on The Mary Sue

Twitch Gets a “Twitch Plays” Category so You can Play Games… on Twitch

Whether you consider yourself to be a hardcore gamer or not, the world was fascinated by the phenomenon known as, “Twitch Plays Pokemon.” Through frustratingly intense gameplay with thousands of people behind the wheel, battles were won, Pokemon were lost, Reddit pages were made, and the Elite Four were eventually defeated. I think it’s time we got some more of that madness.

To help the streaming world get back to something like this, Twitch Plays has become its own separate directory made from the company. With this, more developers will put their games into this experience and possibly make original games just for it. Also, as its own directory they will be easier to discover, helping out the creators and the players who want to find it.

Twitch Plays is a funny thing, but it has proven to be enjoyable so we might as well see how far we can go with it.