I recently saw this video involving a vtuber who streamed for several weeks on end with no breaks beyond the necessities (sleeping, bathroom breaks, etc.). I initially assumed she was putting on a character voice because she was very high pitched, but wouldn't that really hurt her vocal chords after a while? And even if she had started out doing a character voice, is it possible that she'd eventually start naturally speaking that way after doing it for so long?
Disclaimer: I don't really know much about voice training, and I don't think I'd ever actually want to do this, but I got thinking lately. So, I think the basic idea behind voice training is just that you keep doing a voice that initially feels unnatural, and eventually your body will adapt and it will start to feel natural, right? If that is the case, then I wonder if an experienced voice actor could basically go through the same thing with one of their character voices? We usually think about it in relation to trans people, but it could theoretically apply to anyone doing any voice, right?
@socks I've seen that game before and it does look interesting! I just never got around to trying it
Any game with a boss rush should also let you choose individual bosses to fight whenever you want. That way you can practice against the individual fights giving you trouble rather than having to work your way back up to that specific boss every single time.
Also more games should have a boss rush of some kind. They tend to be one of the highlights of the games when they're present.
@socks Apparently people use "L-bomb" to refer to saying that you love someone in a romantic way. I just recently learned that this is a term for it
me just now after seeing the term 'L-bomb' in the context of a relationship: "...loser?"
what swf actually is: a file format
what my brain sees: “safe work for”