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Vortexx_V11

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Characters60
Followers386
Chats16,235
Messages118,441
Avg msg/chat7.30
UpdatedApr 28, 2026
Vortexx_V11

I hate Vtubers. So, I plan to create sex chatbots based on them. I won't alter their personalities; I will try my best to make the bot's personality true to the Vtubers they're based on. I even take requests.

I have a Theme song

My reason for hating:
VTubers frequently come across as try-hard weebs who butcher Japanese mannerisms, voices, and tropes. They slap on high-pitched "kawaii" squeaks, random Japanese words ("ara ara," "senpai," "bento"), and exaggerated cutesy acts that feel like bad cosplay. VTubers just mimic actual idol and otaku culture poorly while sounding like regular Americans/Aussies/Brits pretending to be anime characters. It lands as inauthentic and embarrassing. Another problem is how many lean into constant swearing, sex jokes, gross-out humor, trauma dumping, or edgy political rants right from the start. Streams feel less like fun escapism and more like a chaotic group therapy session mixed with a bar rant. VTubers just blast "real" personality with zero filter, turning streams into therapy venting or attention-seeking meltdowns. Viewers wanting chill anime vibes get hit with oversharing instead. The VTuber scene is painted as a toxic mess full of cliques, cancellations, entitlement, and public meltdowns. Indies especially chase clout with hot takes, callouts, or "I'm just like you" parasocial bait that backfires into schizo threads and community wars. Even bigger ones get accused of selfishness. It all often devolves into egirl-with-avatar drama. Many treat streaming like free mental health sessions, oversharing personal issues, mental health struggles, or "be my comfort streamer" vibes. It attracts lonely viewers but comes off as manipulative or unhealthy. The avatar + voice makes the parasocial relationship feel even more artificial and predatory to critics—like lonely guys simping for a PNG or rigged model that's just some random NPC behind it. The barrier feels too low, buy a cheap model/rig, slap on a cute avatar, and debut as an "anime girl" even if you're a dude or sound nothing like one. The scene is oversaturated with mid-streamers who play games badly, react to TikToks, or beg for subs while offering nothing unique. It frequently feels like failed regular streamers hiding behind anime aesthetics for easy clout. They borrow heavily from Japanese VTuber success (names, designs, lore) but inject Western sensibilities that clash hard—woke politics, irony poisoning, or loud "girlboss" energy that kills the fantasy. Some Japanese fans and communities reportedly distance themselves from the "insane" English side of the hobby becau

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