Nirvana Top Laner, Reborn Tokyo Girl

Chapter 34, page 33: Holy crap, the Ghost King is amazing!

Chapter 34, Section 33: Holy crap, the Ghost King is amazing!
That person's account name is "LAST Aine who is always on time and never leaves early", and the profile picture is a pink-haired anime character.

It's certainly a pleasant surprise to have people sending you comments and watching your live stream.

However, Shimamura Yuna quickly realized that this was the website's automatic streaming mechanism.

Sometimes, Bilibili will randomly push some new streamers' live streams to some people in the corresponding traffic pool to attract them to watch your live stream, thereby providing some initial traffic.

If you can retain these viewers, Bilibili's big data will determine that your live stream is attractive, and then push more traffic to you, allowing more people to see you.

This can be considered one of the ways some streamers become popular.

However, Shimamura Yuna was self-aware.

I'm not very good at chatting with the audience, nor am I good at providing them with emotional value.

Instead of trying to rely on retention rates and big data to drive traffic, it's more practical to focus on editing and creating videos to attract users.

That's why she didn't pay much attention to this "last punctual and never late Ain," and simply replied casually, "Yeah, she's a girl. Do you know me?"

In her opinion, this person would probably leave the live stream soon because he got bored.

To her surprise, the other party did not leave the live stream as quickly as she had expected.

Instead, he stayed in the live stream for a long time, asking many questions along the way.

"Last Love Voice, always on time and never leaving early": [Host, your accent doesn't sound Chinese, are you a foreigner?]

Yuna Shimamura: "You can tell from that? Do I have an accent?"

"Last Aine, always on time": [Yes, although your Chinese is already very good, it's obvious you're a foreigner. And I'm guessing you're Japanese.]

Yuna Shimamura was somewhat surprised by this.

In her imagination, since she was Chinese in her previous life, Chinese should have been at a native-level level.

How could there be an accent?
How could people tell that I'm a Japanese girl?
She quickly muted her microphone, took out her phone, and used a recording app to record herself speaking Chinese. She listened to the recording herself.

Then I was surprised to find
'He really does have an accent'

And you can tell at a glance that it has a colonel's accent.

She was genuinely puzzled by this.

Logically speaking, if I was Chinese in my past life, how could I have an accent? Isn't that a bit illogical?
After thinking about it carefully, she felt that it was most likely caused by the body's vocal habits.

The different ways Japanese and Chinese people speak may lead to differences in tongue structure and vocalization habits.
Since it wasn't a very important issue, and she didn't know much about it, Shimamura Yuna didn't dwell on it for long and quickly returned to her live stream.

After that, the "last punctual and never late" also sent her some bullet comments intermittently.

[Host, are you Japanese? If so, where did you learn Chinese?]

Yuna Shimamura: "I taught myself."

[Streamer, why did you decide to try and play on the Chinese server?]

Yuna Shimamura: "Because there are more players on the Chinese server."

Perhaps because the retention rate was still barely acceptable, some viewers came to the live stream intermittently.

The number of people online, as shown in the backend, reached an astonishing 15.
It may not seem like much, but it's actually quite a lot for a new streamer.

Intermittently, these people were also sending her comments.

What Shimamura Yuna found rather strange was that these people, who seemed to have been brought here from who-knows-where, all seemed to know her, and their first words were often, "The Demon King himself has arrived?"

The second question was, "Is it a woman?"

The third sentence was, "Holy crap, it's Japanese?"

Although there weren't many people in the live stream, everyone asked these three questions.

Fortunately, she didn't need to answer the questions herself anymore. The "last punctual and never leaving early" from the very beginning of the live stream helped her explain to the later viewers.

However, she was still very curious.
I just play ranked matches in the first region, and I haven't posted any videos to promote myself or attracted any traffic from anyone.

Why does it seem like everyone who enters the live stream knows me?

Why is this?

Moreover, the way these people talk seems to have a certain flavor to it.

If you solo kill someone, they'll say things like, "Wow, Yuna is awesome!" or "Ghost King is awesome!"

If they were killed, they would say things like "like the district" or "look at you, Tang."

She could still barely understand these, but found the expressions a bit strange.

There were also some that seemed to be filled with slang and internet memes that she couldn't understand at all.

The key point is that these people who speak slang can still communicate logically and consistently in the live broadcast room.

It's one thing if it's just that one person has this way of speaking.

The problem is that everyone in the live stream speaks in this style.

She was really curious whether she hadn't been online for a while and was a little out of touch with the latest internet memes.
Could it be that after Ji Ni Tai Mei and Ma Bao Guo, something else has become popular on the internet?

Is this how young people in China talk now?
She was genuinely confused, and she had spent a long time dealing with some issues that day.

So, after broadcasting for more than an hour, she hurriedly chose to end the broadcast, intending to calm down first and then come back to broadcast tomorrow.

What she didn't know was how this short live stream would generate her initial buzz online after she ended the broadcast.
In fact, almost all of these people who used slang in the live stream were fans of "Dragon God," who had been crushed by Shimamura Yuna in ranked matches before.

The incident of Shimamura Yuna beating up Ryujin that day has generated some buzz among Ryujin's fan base, but not a huge amount.

That day, the guy who recorded the video edited it up and posted it, titled "Dragon God gets brutally beaten by Ghost King for two rounds, completely breaks down, and announces the expulsion of the pet dog!"

This video has around 100,000 views on Bilibili.

Adding in other pre-recorded clips from this streamer, this segment probably has around two to three hundred thousand views across the entire site.

In other words, a significant number of people actually knew that Ryujin was beaten to a pulp by Shimamura Yuna that day.

But that was it.

After all, there are too many people who have defeated and forced Longshen to quit streaming. Among them, "Ghost King YUNA" is one of the more skilled and memorable ones, but he is not worth remembering for too long.

And so, as time passed, just when Ryushin's viewers were about to forget about Shimamura Yuna, Bilibili's amazing push mechanism brought some of Ryushin's viewers back to Shimamura Yuna's live stream.

Then, the small group of people who watched Shimamura Yuna's live stream were surprised to discover something.
Amazing! It turns out that "Ghost King Yuna" is a girl.

Amazing! It turns out that this "Demon King Yuna" is Japanese.

Amazing! It turns out that this "Ghost King Yuna" has gone from being ranked as low as Diamond II in Dragon God's server to almost reaching the King rank in the first server in such a short period of time.

This immediately piqued the interest of this group of viewers.

Coincidentally, "LAST Aiyin, who is always on time and never leaves early" is also a minor recording host for Ryushin, with about 20,000 to 30,000 fans on Bilibili.

After discovering Shimamura Yuna's live stream, he immediately started recording it and edited the video after Shimamura Yuna ended the broadcast.

A video titled "Yuna, the Demon King who slaughtered the Dragon God that day, is actually a woman? Or a Japanese girl?" was quickly released.

The video's cover image features these words in large red letters: "Holy crap, the Ghost King is amazing! The top-tier vampire is actually a female player!"

P.S.: Please continue reading!

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(End of this chapter)

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