Check out my series im making on youtube called 'I click on heads'
https://youtu.be/mHicavtg1g8
https://youtu.be/pHuqCZTeBdQ
https://youtu.be/Yd9bVMxE6Jo
I also stream on twitch @: twitch.tv/tazmalleroffical
Thanks let me know how they are
https://youtu.be/mHicavtg1g8
https://youtu.be/pHuqCZTeBdQ
https://youtu.be/Yd9bVMxE6Jo
I also stream on twitch @: twitch.tv/tazmalleroffical
Thanks let me know how they are
griffwhat's it about?
Sometimes, I click on heads and it looks cool
Sometimes, I click on heads and it looks cool
JWBwho asked
???
u ran a newbie tournament then dunk on someone new to the community?
there's no need to be an asshole just move on instead of trashing someone
???
u ran a newbie tournament then dunk on someone new to the community?
there's no need to be an asshole just move on instead of trashing someone
ur right tbh my comment was needlessly rude keep clicking on heads tazmaller
I mean ill take constructive critisism for the videos like what to edit and what I should and shouldnt have
This website just isn't the right audience for your content. TFTV is focused around competitive gameplay and the community surrounding it, while your content caters to more casual TF2 players. People here won't find your content as enjoyable as people on the TF2 subreddit or other places like that.
You can also post it on TF2 Coaching Central. It's a discord server with a lot of newbies and you could put it in the self-promotion channel. People normally watch the vids there from what I've seen (also may give you interest in trying out comp 6s :) )
Some actual thoughts from watching the video:
- You might want to cut out boring bits and focus on multi-frag sequences. It seems your vids are only from actually playing the round in its entirety
- Stylizing it in a frag movie may be your best bet. Use the first bullet point and layer some music over it, mute ingame-audio in a video edtior (or at the very least, lower it to where the music is louder), and only cut to scenes with frags (or if you don't want to do cuts, just speed up portions of the video where you're not getting frags up until you get frags). People want to see frags actually happening not the time between you hitting body shots/missing before actually getting the frag. You'll lose viewer attention really quick
Also looking at your twitch stream you want to make sure your video output is taking up the entire screen. If you look back at your saved broadcasts there's some black screen space. If you need help feel free to reach out
If you're aiming to make content and grow a decent following try to follow how some other small YTers make their content for TF2. You're doing a good job to start off so find some unique video editing styles and go from there :)
Some actual thoughts from watching the video:
- You might want to cut out boring bits and focus on multi-frag sequences. It seems your vids are only from actually playing the round in its entirety
- Stylizing it in a frag movie may be your best bet. Use the first bullet point and layer some music over it, mute ingame-audio in a video edtior (or at the very least, lower it to where the music is louder), and only cut to scenes with frags (or if you don't want to do cuts, just speed up portions of the video where you're not getting frags up until you get frags). People want to see frags actually happening not the time between you hitting body shots/missing before actually getting the frag. You'll lose viewer attention really quick
Also looking at your twitch stream you want to make sure your video output is taking up the entire screen. If you look back at your saved broadcasts there's some black screen space. If you need help feel free to reach out
If you're aiming to make content and grow a decent following try to follow how some other small YTers make their content for TF2. You're doing a good job to start off so find some unique video editing styles and go from there :)
TazmallerI mean ill take constructive critisism for the videos like what to edit and what I should and shouldnt have
what det said, but also i honestly don't think just plain casual gameplay without commentary will really appeal to anyone. either go down a route of more heavily edited stuff to create comedy or focus on commentary to be entertaining. or you could move away from gameplay-focused content and find topics to talk about or something. regardless, if you want your videos to be enjoyable to watch you need a little something more to them than "full-length casual game with no commentary" IMO.
what content do *you* like watching? figure out what it is you like about it and incorporate that maybe. if its just gameplay with a persons commentary to make it entertaining (such as classic muselk content), focus on commentary. if its topic discussion based like uncle dane, think about if there's anything you want to talk about. if its silly edits like, uh, idk, blobchap? then look into that. think about what you really wanna do with your content and how you can make it interesting.
what det said, but also i honestly don't think just plain casual gameplay without commentary will really appeal to anyone. either go down a route of more heavily edited stuff to create comedy or focus on commentary to be entertaining. or you could move away from gameplay-focused content and find topics to talk about or something. regardless, if you want your videos to be enjoyable to watch you need a little something more to them than "full-length casual game with no commentary" IMO.
what content do *you* like watching? figure out what it is you like about it and incorporate that maybe. if its just gameplay with a persons commentary to make it entertaining (such as classic muselk content), focus on commentary. if its topic discussion based like uncle dane, think about if there's anything you want to talk about. if its silly edits like, uh, idk, blobchap? then look into that. think about what you really wanna do with your content and how you can make it interesting.