Top products from r/gigantic

We found 3 product mentions on r/gigantic. We ranked the 3 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/gigantic:

u/Bazeleel · 2 pointsr/gigantic

Ive been horrible and not doing my video to go alone with these so for that I am sorry :( Ill get back to these this week!


So competitively the game already has those elements. eSport wise, there needs to be solid shoutcaster, good backing from motiga, a community that WANTS a scene in the first place, and a willingness for teams to be part of tournaments without a prize pool.

 

Shoutcasting

 

Microphone
These are a few things for shoutcasting that MUST be followed. Shoutcasters need to have a working microphone and one that sounds clear. Ive seen a ton of people try and shoutcast with a cheap Logitech mic or using their webcam mic and its painful to listen to. You are able to get a good CHEAP mic for around 50-80$.

Snowball Microphone!

 

Overlay

This is always something that will make or break a tournament. Sounds silly but both the in game spectator UI and the graphic that the caster is using MUST be easy to read and provide enough info for the viewer to follow.

 

Duel Shoudcasting vs solo

Both are perfectly good ways to have commentary but personally I like having 2 shoutcasters. One gives the play by play and the other gives the analytical commentary while the game's action is slow. Both of these casters must synergize well with each other, this is really hard to find a lot of the times.

 

Personality

Having a personality in general is always a good idea, makes you more likeable and easy to connect to. A example of a wonderful internet personality is Day9. He is funny, friendly, extremely kind, and just a over all nice guy. It wasn't his content of the game he was apart of that made him as popular as he is today. It was the way he portrayed him self and the way he presented himself. Having a good personality as a shoutcaster will go a long way.


 

 

Tournaments

 

Starting off

Right of the bat tournament will not have prize pools and they realistically shouldn't. This is to make sure that the teams playing are doing it for the love of the game and not just to get some shinny thing at the end. We want our top teams to love the game not the prizes.

 

Having a good tournament team

This is very important and can set your reputation for the rest of the games life span. You need to make sure you have a group of admins that can help you keep the tournament running smoothly and deal with things that you might not have time for. For tournaments with 16 teams I would recommend a admin team of about 20 people. Anything larger then that, you will need a team of 30 or more.

 

Hub

Having 1 centralized location for each team captain to go is very much needed. Mumble is free and teamspeak servers are very cheap.

 

 

Community

Its very important for the community to support every tournament, NOT JUST THE BIG ONES. Supporting a tournament scene that is both top team and casual team friendly will not only help the player base grow but will help motiga see where they can improve their support for the scene in general.

u/Myriaderoc · 3 pointsr/gigantic

Step 1: Buy "How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way" https://www.amazon.com/dp/0671530771/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_pMmeAbVDBX1NP

Step 2: Go to Deviant Art, Twitter, Tumblr, Fur Affinity, CG Society, or other artist hub and look for tutorials. You can also be specific and look for certain species. A search for "frog fighter" might net you results similar to Wu. "Dragon taur" will get you things like Charnok. "Retro female gunner" might result in things like Beckett.

Step 3: Take what you learned in steps 1 and 2 and apply it to works by the most impactful artists you've come across. Download their work, trace, and deconstruct it into simple forms. Learn the foundational shapes and proportions they used. Study the detail and technique. Check out progress or timelapse videos. Remember that this is for learning. Do not post or claim this work as your own, and do not fixate excessively on one artist -- develop your own style.

Also consider doing timed practice sketches imitating things you like. Timed sketches make a HUGE difference if you stick with them. Spend an hour doing 30 second to 10 minute sketches. https://www.quickposes.com/en/gestures/timed and http://www.posemaniacs.com/thirtysecond are good examples.

Step 4: Come up with your own scenes, characters, and environments from scratch. Practice what you learned. It will be bad. You must be a bad artist before you can be a good one. Join an artist community and you might grow a following, or posting art will at least get other artists to let you into their circles. I know I treat other artists (and good commenters) differently than randoms. Some artists create their own characters or adoptables with various features that you can use as creative inspiration. Don't copy -- be inspired.

Step 5: Consider checking out programming for a local art, comic, gaming, or furry convention. These usually attract artists. Some (like me) will run panels trying to help newer artists.

Tools you need: Paper and pencil. Consider a set of pencils at different hardnesses. Stick to greyscale before moving to color. Also consider PC pen tablets with pressure sensitivity, but beware the urge to over use undo and fixate on little details and perfection. Adopt an "on to the next" mentality so you do not burn out.

u/Kirbachu · 3 pointsr/gigantic

Do your headphones have a separate cord for the mic or are they both in the same one? If there's only one then you're probably going to have to get a splitter:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00Y4663GG