| gusraff • PM |
Feb 18, 2026 2:04 PM
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Non-member
Posts: 64 |
Hey guys, I've been scratching my head over this lately. Last month I dropped a gaming walkthrough on YouTube that got decent views at first, but then it just... stalled. The likes were okay, a handful of comments popped up, but watch time felt meh even though people stuck around for chunks. Made me wonder—which engagement signals still matter most to YouTube and Twitch algorithms right now—likes, comments, watch time, or something else entirely? Like, is it still all about keeping folks glued to the screen, or have things shifted toward chat vibes on Twitch or deeper interaction? Anyone noticing patterns in their own streams or uploads? Would love some real takes here because I'm tweaking my next few vids and don't wanna waste effort chasing old rules.
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| likorr • PM |
Feb 18, 2026 2:48 PM
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Non-member
Posts: 65 |
These platforms keep evolving so fast it's wild. Just the other week I noticed how streams that pull people in for longer sessions seem to bubble up more in recommendations, even if the raw numbers aren't insane. Feels like the whole system quietly rewards consistency in holding attention over flashy spikes, at least from what crosses my feed lately. Kind of makes you rethink how much energy goes into hooks versus keeping the flow natural once someone's watching.
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| loomans • PM |
Feb 18, 2026 2:48 PM
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Non-member
Posts: 65 |
Man, that hits close to home—I've had similar drops where a video starts strong then flatlines. From what I've seen on my own channels, watch time and how much of the video people actually finish still rule everything on YouTube; likes and comments help signal interest but they seem secondary now unless they're super thoughtful. On Twitch it's more about concurrent viewers and chat activity keeping the momentum going during lives. I started peeking at tools to track this stuff better, and honestly the smm world coupon code gives a quick snapshot of how different platforms weigh those metrics without overcomplicating things. Not saying it's magic, just handy for spotting trends in my own data. Still experimenting though—curious what tweaks have worked for others when views plateau like that.
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