forked from cadey/xesite
234 lines
8.6 KiB
Markdown
234 lines
8.6 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: VTubing on Linux
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date: 2022-01-15
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series: vtuber
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tags:
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- envtuber
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- nixos
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- yearofthelinuxdesktop
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---
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In my [last post](/blog/vtubing-setup-2022-01-13) I went through my VTubing
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setup on Windows and all the "generations" of setup that I've done over the last
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year. Thanks to the meddling of a certain nerd who is in the chat watching me
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write this, I have figured out a way to run this setup on Linux. The ultimate
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goal for this phase is to get all this running on my work laptop so I can use it
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for a webcam. However this post is just going to cover the Linux setup bits.
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## Differences Between OSes
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On Windows, this setup is really straightforward. VSeeFace provides a [webcam
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driver](https://www.vseeface.icu/#virtual-camera) that makes the output of the
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VSeeFace app pretend to be a USB webcam. Google Meets, OBS and the like can then
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pick that up like it was a normal webcam. The overall flow looks like this:
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![The webcam connects over USB to VSeeFace, VSeeFace pretends to be a webcam to
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OBS and OBS sends video frames to
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Twitch.](/static/blog/vtubing-linux/windows.svg)
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This doesn't work at all on Linux though. There's no real way to get VSeeFace (a
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windows application that runs under Unity) to directly pretend to be a webcam at
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this moment.
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[Pedantically, you can probably get away with doing this using a combination of
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PipeWire, Video4Linux or some other incarnation like that, but the main point
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here is that VSeeFace is a Windows app and I don't think it's possible to make
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Linux-specific calls like that. Feel free to prove me
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wrong.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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So, instead we need to have VSeeFace directly output to OBS. This makes the flow
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look something like this:
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![The webcam connects over USB to OpenSeeFace, OpenSeeFace sends UDP packets to
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VSeeFace, OBS grabs the VSeeFace window via XComposite, OBS then sends video
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frames to Twitch.](/static/blog/vtubing-linux/nixos.svg)
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The main difference is that for some reason VSeeFace on Linux can't capture the
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webcam directly. This isn't an issue however because
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[OpenSeeFace](https://github.com/emilianavt/OpenSeeFace) can capture the webcam
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and then send the face capture data directly to VSeeFace instead. Then OBS can
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grab VSeeFace via XComposite like normal.
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[There may be a way to do this in Wayland, however we haven't figured that out
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yet. Please let me know if you figure out a way to get this working in
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Wayland.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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One of the major usability differences here is that OpenSeeFace has support for
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tracking blinking. However, at the same time my avatar opens its eyes really
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slowly when I do blink. There's probably a slider I need to set to make this
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less...horrible, but overall it does work! I don't get this on Windows, that's
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interesting.
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[Kieto, his eyes closed!](conversation://Numa/delet)
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## Failed Attempts
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One of the biggest stumbling points was the fact that VSeeFace is distributed as
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a 64 bit application. Somehow my naive usage of Wine in its default config
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caused me to create a 32 bit Wine prefix (it was then I learned that there are
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such things as 32 and 64 bit prefixes and how they are mutually incompatible),
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which made it impossible to launch VSeeFace because Wine would reject it for
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being a 64 bit program.
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I went through several rounds of nuking `~/.wine`, trying to run it again,
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setting various weird environment variables, setting build overrides, it was a
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catastrophe.
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Other people have reported that you need to use
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[Lutris](https://dumbotaku.com/info/401) to install and use VSeeFace on Linux.
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This did not work. This did not work at all. Trying to do it this way on a NixOS
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machine was an absolute waste of my time and was demoralizing and frustrating.
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[I think it has to do with the fact that Lutris really really really really
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wants to have its own special snowflake vendored copies of Wine/Proton and it
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will fight you if you try to have your way otherwise.](conversation://Cadey/coffee)
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Then I realized that I was doing all this on my work laptop. This laptop is
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fairly standard, but also incredibly cursed in its own unique and fun ways. It
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shipped with Windows, but also with all the annoying "screw you for wanting to
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use Linux" settings turned on. Getting to the point where a NixOS ISO would boot
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was an exercise in tedium and randomly flipping settings on and off.
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So on the request of the aforementioned meddler, I tried running VSeeFace on my
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gaming tower.
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It worked first try.
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[AAAAAA](conversation://Cadey/coffee)
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## How To Make This Creative Abomination Come To Fruition on NixOS
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The easiest part of getting all this working is to download VSeeFace. You just
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[download the .zip](https://www.vseeface.icu/) from the main page and extract
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into your Downloads folder.
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Then you need to add the following to your `configuration.nix` file:
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```nix
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# ...
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environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [
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# vseeface
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wine64
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winetricks
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];
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# ...
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```
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Rebuild and then this will put Wine (as `wine64`) in your `$PATH`. Now you need
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to install the Arial font using winetricks:
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```console
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$ env WINE=wine64 winetricks arial
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```
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This will take a moment to create your Wine prefix in `~/.wine` and populate it
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with the needed fonts. VSeeFace uses the Arial font everywhere in the UI, so
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this is not an optional step.
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Now, clone OpenSeeFace to somewhere:
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```console
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$ git clone https://github.com/emilianavt/OpenSeeFace ~/tmp/OpenSeeFace
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```
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And then copy in this `shell.nix` file into the root of the git repo:
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```nix
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{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:
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(pkgs.buildFHSUserEnv {
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name = "pipzone";
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targetPkgs = pkgs:
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(with pkgs; [
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python39
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python39Packages.pip
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python39Packages.virtualenv
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libGL
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libGLU
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glib
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]);
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runScript = "bash";
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}).env
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```
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Then run `nix-shell` to activate an environment that will pretend to be a normal
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Linux system and paste in these commands to set up the Python environment:
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```
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python -m venv .venv
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source .venv/bin/activate
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pip3 install onnxruntime opencv-python pillow numpy
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```
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This will install the dependencies into a python venv.
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[We can't really use a normal Nix packaging flow here because <a
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href="https://github.com/jonringer/nixpkgs/commit/bc2b132f98b48220fa5ec148aa2ba170aeb9a891">onnixruntime
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was removed from nixpkgs</a>. This is okay though, we can hack around
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this!](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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Then you can run OpenSeeFace and you will see many lines of output:
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```console
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$ python facetracker.py -c 0 -W 1280 -H 720 --discard-after 0 --scan-every 0 --no-3d-adapt 1 --max-feature-updates 900
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```
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This will show many lines that look something like this:
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```
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Took 20.50ms (detect: 0.00ms, crop: 0.82ms, track: 17.70ms, 3D points: 1.93ms)
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Confidence[0]: 0.9148 / 3D fitting error: 12.7974 / Eyes: O, O
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```
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This dumps most of the internal state of the face tracking algorithm. VSeeFace
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will pick up on this and then turn that into movement instructions for your
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waifu.
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Finally you can make an XComposite capture in OBS and then use that to get
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things through to Twitch that way.
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## Nice Wrapper Script
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[All these instructions are lame, I just wanna get it done
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fast!](conversation://Numa/delet)
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You can get this all running with a super hacky script like this!
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```shell
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#!/usr/bin/env nix-shell
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#! nix-shell -p wget -p git -p winetricks -p wine64 -i bash
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mkdir -p ~/tmp/VTubing
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cd ~/tmp/VTubing
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wget https://github.com/emilianavt/VSeeFaceReleases/releases/download/v1.13.37b/VSeeFace-v1.13.37b.zip
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unzip VSeeFace-v1.13.37b.zip
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WINE=wine64 winetricks arial
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git clone https://github.com/emilianavt/OpenSeeFace
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(cd OpenSeeFace && wget -O shell.nix https://gist.githubusercontent.com/Xe/d739fd94c81c1690645c8f4607058488/raw/100c8c5e43ed8dc4b19b890173234ff28b0f9c7e/shell.nix | base64 -d > shell.nix && nix-shell) &
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(cd VSeeFace && wine64 VSeeFace.exe) &
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wait
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```
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This will get you everything set up and ready to go in a flash! No warranty.
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[You should really do this automagically with Nix.](conversation://Mara/hmm)
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[Yes, I should, but that is for another day. This day is not today.](conversation://Cadey/coffee)
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---
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I'm really glad that I have this working on Linux though. I feel really bad
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about being known as a Linux enthusiast but then all of my streams are visibly
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using Windows. It's totally valid to want to start out on Windows because it's
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easier though. This stuff is baroque and complicated. Hopefully this will make
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the path a bit clearer if you want to do VTubing on Linux like I am.
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This article was written live on Twitch! Check out the stream vod
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[here](https://www.twitch.tv/videos/1264594247), and in a few days it will be live on YouTube
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[here](https://youtu.be/cSR1ZA012aQ). Follow [my channel](https://twitch.tv/princessxen)
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and get notified when I go live with more writing.
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