Platforms fight to woo livestreamers as Twitch exits Korea
이 글자크기로 변경됩니다.
(예시) 가장 빠른 뉴스가 있고 다양한 정보, 쌍방향 소통이 숨쉬는 다음뉴스를 만나보세요. 다음뉴스는 국내외 주요이슈와 실시간 속보, 문화생활 및 다양한 분야의 뉴스를 입체적으로 전달하고 있습니다.
Domestic streaming platforms are lining up benefits to attract more users as Twitch prepares to pull out of Korea.
AfreecaTV, the second most-dominant streaming platform in Korea after Amazon's Twitch, announced a new set of regulations on Friday that would make it easier for Twitch streamers to transition to its service. It has also rolled out an integration that will allow streamers and users to log in with their Twitch accounts.
Conditions to earn AfreecaTV's “Best BJ” badge, which gives streamers who receive it a variety of benefits related to its virtual monetary system, have been eased. A creator generally must stream for more than 500 hours in order to earn the title, but AfreecaTV will now count up to 400 hours of Twitch streaming toward that total.
The platform is also offering free one-month subscriptions to 100,000- Twitch-turned-AfreecaTV users, who can claim them on a first come, first served basis.
Twitch took up 52 percent of Korea's streaming market share in November, while AfreecaTV took 45 percent, according to market tracker Mobile Index.
Elsewhere, AfreecaTV is undergoing a major rebrand, and will change its platform name to “SOOP” next year.
“I believe that AfreecaTV is changing its platform name in an attempt for a fresh new start and to get rid of negative connotations surrounding the name,” an anonymous industry insider told the Korea JoongAng Daily.
SOOP means forest in Korean. The name implies that each streamer represents at tree and that the platform encompasses each of their broadcasts.
The names of the platform's currency, currently dubbed “star balloons,” and its streamers, currently referred to as “broadcast jockeys” or “BJ,” are also expected to change.
Naver is Korea's largest portal site, but a newcomer to the livestream industry; its new service, dubbed “Chzzk,” will open in open beta on Tuesday.
Chzzk is currently accepting applications from streamers who have more than 10,000 subscribers on other platforms, including Twitch, in a bid to secure popular creators.
Naver quietly launched the service in closed beta on Dec. 5 and formed a Chzzk-linked online community on its social platform Naver Game Lounge the following day, after Twitch announced its departure from Korea. The company announced that it was receiving applicants for the open beta via a public community notice on Dec. 7.
Chzzk will also sponsor and stream a seasonal League of Legends tournament in collaboration with Twitch. The event, which was initially hosted by Twitch alone, is the streaming community's largest biannual esports event. It will be Twitch's last project before it leaves Korea in February.
Naver expects to launch Chzzk publicly by the first half of next year, once it determines that the service is stable.
BY LEE JAE-LIM [lee.jaelim@joongang.co.kr]
Copyright © 코리아중앙데일리. 무단전재 및 재배포 금지.
- Incheon hotel fire injures 54, two of them severely
- Child molester Cho Doo-soon defies curfew, sent back home
- Life sentence upheld for wife who goaded husband to jump into water
- Experience the season at these Korean Christmas markets
- China reportedly expands ban on foreign smartphones
- North Korea fires long-range ballistic missile toward East Sea: JCS
- Cold, snow and wind batter Korea over the weekend
- [THINK ENGLISH] 이강인, 한국을 빛낸 스포츠인 투표에서 손흥민에 이어 2위
- Netherlands summons Korean ambassador, sparking controversy
- [INTERVIEW] How Tim Hortons plans to succeed in Korea's overcrowded coffee scene