At any given time, there are tens of thousands watching and playing games on Twitch. Some people are obsessed with one game, other people watch lots of games. The service recently enlisted its âscienceâ team to visualize what communities of Twitch look like, and itâs beautiful.
Wait, they have a science team? Yep. Itâs a group within Twitch dedicated to studying Twitch.
Okay, back to the surreal images.
There are tons of circles on each one, and every circle represents a channel on the service.
âThe lines between channels represent the amount of overlap between the audiences of those channels; each time a specific viewer watched two different channels during the time period this data draws from, it makes the connection between those channels a little stronger. Because weâre only drawing on a short time period in December, not all channels are represented here, and sizing only approximates activity in that time period.â
The company follows this up by breaking down the specific patterns within various communities, including League of Legends, DOTA 2, Hearthstone, Minecraft, and others.
Games like League of Legends are their own beasts, which is why theyâre dominant, and other games are lumped into a catch-all âvariety.â How the small stuff breaks down is interesting:
Itâd be cool if this could be generated in real-time. Iâd love to have this massive, macro sense of what people were playing and watching all day long. Weâd all be Professor Xavier in Cerebro!
Thereâs plenty more on Twitchâs site. If it werenât for the giant text, theyâd make rad wallpapers!
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