VTuber agency PANDORA registers the XTuber trademark and sparks mockery online
The Japanese company is looking for creators willing to alternate broadcasts between avatars and real faces.

The privacy shield has always been the main financial engine behind the phenomenon of interactive digital avatars. This March 16th, the Japanese talent agency PANDORA decided to blow up this golden rule by announcing the official trademark registration of XTuber. This new format of content creators seeks to destroy the barrier of virtual anonymity to publicly expose the physical faces of its employees during broadcasts.

The double life of streaming
The pronunciation dictated by the corporation is cross-tuber. The management defined this business model as a live entertainment hybrid. A traditional talent in the VTuber market never reveals their flesh-and-blood identity to maintain the illusion of the animated character. This new wave of creatives will constantly alternate their content. They will broadcast using colorful two-dimensional models and make in-person appearances in front of the camera using their real bodies.

Massive blind hiring
To inaugurate this strange talent division, the company launched a recruitment campaign under the name Project YOHANE. The auditions completely ignore the professional background of the applicants. The agency accepts candidates regardless of their zero experience in front of the microphone or lack of specialized recording equipment. Ironically, the first screening filter allows them to hide their real face, even though the final contract obliges them to perform public in-person activities.
Adult jokes and legal issues
The otaku community's reception was brutally sarcastic. The corporate announcement received a wave of mockery and criticism based on three key points that threaten the project's future:
- Accidental association: Fans pointed out that the chosen name sounds exactly like a famous adult video platform.
- Lack of originality: Multiple users recalled that hybrid content creators have existed for years working independently.
- Platform policies: The commercial move directly clashes with the strict regulations of YouTube, a company that penalizes the use of the word Tuber in third-party trademarks.
Considering that the magic of the concept lies in the visual fantasy, would you consume content from a streamer who exposes their true identity on camera, breaking the avatar's illusion?
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