Trillestial 🛸🫧 Bubbly Alien VTuber

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Trillestial 🛸🫧 Bubbly Alien VTuber

Trillestial 🛸🫧 Bubbly Alien VTuber

@trillestial

✦ Gaming ▪ Yapping ▪ Art ✧ https://t.co/PsRKO3lhAS ✦ @HolyHosting Partner ✧ let me probe you ✦ pfp by @ibnuhawari_ ✧ banner by @mellowpopworld

[email protected] Beigetreten Temmuz 2021
205 Folgt431 Follower
Trillestial 🛸🫧 Bubbly Alien VTuber
Idk man I don’t mind vgen taking what they need to keep the site up and running. As an artist it can suck but it’s nice to feel safe using vgen over the possibility of being screwed completely on my own somehow I’ve been using it over a year now as artist and client and love it!
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Gutter Bonesie ☢️ Mutant Vtuber
@trillestial I used to say "no yeah" a lot and then one day, at a retail job, I made the mistake of saying "no yeah" to a boomer aged lady, who proceeded to yell at me, and call me stupid just because of that word pairing. and I never said it again LOL
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Trillestial 🛸🫧 Bubbly Alien VTuber
@itsnamittv I just get too overstimulated with trying to talk to chat AND the collaborator(s). So yeah, I prefer to stream alone and honestly just have to try and remind myself the overwhelming part outweighs the fomo
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Roseveil 🐉🧙‍♀️| Dragon Witch Vtuber
I stopped reaching out for collabs and tbh with you, it is not for me. I'm wondering if there are other vtubers like me who just streams alone most of the time. How do you cope up with this T-T I feel like I'm missing out on a lot for not doing collabs.
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Trillestial 🛸🫧 Bubbly Alien VTuber
This added context is so interesting As someone with severe depression it’s nice to have a logical reasoning behind my love for horror, gore, and despair in media, but my huge distaste for it IRL The last part really gets it: “it’s about being the one in control of the fear”
Anish Moonka@AnishA_Moonka

Your brain has a “wandering mode” that kicks in when you’re not focused on anything. In depressed people, this mode gets stuck on repeat, looping the same negative thoughts over and over. A 2025 brain scan study found that horror movies temporarily break that loop. Researchers scanned the brains of 84 people with depression before and after showing them horror clips. The part of the brain responsible for replaying bad thoughts disconnected from the part that decides what to pay attention to. The bigger the disconnect, the more the person actually enjoyed the movie. Your brain can’t replay your worst memories when something on screen is trying to eat someone. But scarier isn’t always better. The same team tested 216 people and found a sweet spot. Fear and enjoyment rise together, but only to a point, then enjoyment drops off. People with moderate depression needed a harder scare to hit that sweet spot. People with severe depression barely felt anything at all. A 2021 study surveyed 310 people during the first COVID lockdown. Horror fans reported less depression, less anxiety, and better sleep than non-fans, even after the researchers accounted for personality differences. People who watched zombie and apocalyptic movies specifically said they felt more prepared for the pandemic. Margee Kerr, a sociologist at the University of Pittsburgh, put brain sensors on 100 people before and after sending them through an extreme haunted house. About half came out in a better mood. Their brains had calmed down the same way a runner’s brain calms down after a long run. When you get scared, your body dumps dopamine (the “reward” chemical), endorphins (natural painkillers), and adrenaline all at once. When the scare ends, the comedown feels good. Mathias Clasen, who runs the Recreational Fear Lab in Denmark (yes, that’s a real lab), splits horror fans into three types: people who watch for the adrenaline rush, “white knucklers” who push through fear to prove something to themselves, and “dark copers” who straight up treat horror movies like medicine for their anxiety or depression. The catch: you have to choose to watch. That’s the whole thing. Being forced into a scary situation doesn’t help, it makes things worse. People with severe anxiety can become more jumpy, not less. A University of Wisconsin study found kids under 14 who watched horror had a higher chance of developing anxiety as adults. 93% of 1,600 Danish kids enjoy at least one scary activity according to a 2025 study, but the line between helpful fear and harmful fear comes down to one thing: whether you’re the one holding the remote.

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Rikku リック ✗
Rikku リック ✗@dyarikku·
⚠️To celebrate my 6th anniversary... ⚠️ ...I will be adopting one of you as my chibi vtuber baby!!! To be eligible: - Drop your model or reference sheet in replies! - Like post + retweet! I will pick 20 vtubers in replies and raffle 1 winner among those! All designs are welcome! 📅Deadline: 26th March (Anniversary Day) The winner will be drawn live on stream!
Rikku リック ✗ tweet media
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Trillestial 🛸🫧 Bubbly Alien VTuber retweetet
toe, lover
toe, lover@carobunga·
Agoraphobia is the most humiliating anxiety disorder
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Ghoul City Online!
Ghoul City Online!@GhoulCityOnline·
As a YouTuber I try to pay attention to what people react negatively to and here is my findings: Green Screen ❌, being on camera ❌, not being on camera ❌, Pngtuber ❌, simple thumbnail ❌, busy thumbnail ❌, over-editing ❌, under-editing ❌, long vids ❌, short vids ❌
lavenza || sleepy.tea@sle3py_t34

no hate to this guy in particular but we need to eradicate the “green screen + holding microphone” genre of youtuber and soon

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