I don't agree with this at all. So let's say I get good, and at Tipped Off this November I make top 8. More than a few people are going to say "Wow this Shenanigan guy is really good! I wanna watch him play some more." Now they're going to go to YouTube / Twitch, where they'll find either:
- A couple videos of me playing against terrible players on channels with like three videos total. And with knowing how lazy smash players are, at that point they're going to say "Man I really with there were more videos of this guy," and then they're going to give up.
- A unified ASL YouTube channel / Twitch archive where they can find the vast majority of the sets I've played (over the past two months if we start now), where it's easy to find sets at a higher level (things like the winners semis and losers finals from Birmingham brawl this weekend).
The first option, which we have right now, leads nowhere. No exposure, no stream viewers, nothing. With the second, it's easy to see where it leads. Someone watches me lose to Zoma, and then they watch some of his sets because he's also really good. Next they're watching Ninkendo, or Spade, or Moogle, and through that discover all the skilled players Alabama has to offer.
@
Dron
has given us incredible opportunity to plan for the future. Infrastructure is, arguably even more so than player skill, the most important factor in popular streams / channels. MD / VA during the heyday of Project M 3.02 certainly wasn't even close to the best region, but it wasn't SoCal or Texas or Tristate who was having 3000 viewer weeklies. It was the guys who put in the time and effort to put together an excellent show.
Perhaps right now we don't have the skill to command a following, but someday (hopefully) we will. And when / if that time comes, it would be a shame to look back at this moment and say "If only."