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by henryprecheur 5484 days ago
Husky & HD (another StarCraft caster) both have a healthy revenue stream from their Youtube Channel. There are at least 12 other casters/players in North America/Europe making a living casting StarCraft II games.

Husky wasn't the first to cast. Guys like Day9, Artosis, & Tasteless cast too, and are quite popular. But HD & Husky were the first to focus mostly on "Virtual" tournaments. The other successful casters focused more on "Real life" tournaments. Artosis & Tasteless even went to Korea for a year to comment StarCraft II games on GomTV. Day9 regularly travel to big tournaments.

And yet, none of them make as much money as Husky & HD (supposedly, I don't have hard numbers.)

It shows the power of the web. The old medias are here to stay, but most of the creativity & growth today comes from the web.

2 comments

Husky and HD appeal to the more casual audience. Their casts are more for entertainment, and they don't do too much in-depth analysis. Artosis, Day9 and Tasteless among others are pretty friendly for the average viewer, but they are definitely more knowledgeable and insightful.

Just a slight correction. Artosis and Tasteless are actually still living in Korea and casting fulltime.

Just a slight correction. Artosis and Tasteless are actually still living in Korea and casting fulltime.

Aye; this past weekend at MLG they even identified themselves as "from South Korea", not America. They'be been there for a few years and haven't announced any plans to move.

Anyone wanting to see their stuff can go to http://www.gomtv.net/

You'll need to pay 10$ to watch all matches from a 'season', but many are free.

I'd have to say that Day9's "Funday Monday" casts are among the most entertaining videos I've ever seen. The guy is absolutely hilarious and remarkably nerdy even for Starcraft casters, qualities which don't show as much in his more analytic casts.
It's in fact entertaining enough to appeal to non-StarCraft 2 players.
It really is like watching a very fast-paced sport match, except without all the constant in-your-face product branding. Like I remember college basketball used to be, except more cerebral.

I'd not played SC or SC2 much but I bought a (replacement - long story) copy last night.

It’s pretty cool that you can be so successful with something that’s utterly inaccessible to me and pretty much everyone I know.
AFAIK, they still both have day jobs, so I'm not sure they're making enough to be casting full time?