Virtualize Wants to Democratize Virtual Music Live Streaming with StarLi
TLDR
- Virtualize’s StarLi app lets anyone stream a virtual music live using a 3D avatar and a smartphone, with AI-generated stage effects.
Key Takeaways
- StarLi allows users to upload a 3D avatar file and go live with music in minutes, similar to YouTube Live but in a metaverse environment.
- AI analyzes each song and auto-generates matching 3D visuals: lighting shifts, falling stars, camera moves, and bubble effects synced to the chorus.
- Current barrier to entry is high: owning a custom 3D avatar costs roughly 1 million yen; Virtualize is fundraising to build a smartphone-based avatar creation feature.
- Founder Eitetu Komiyama (b. 1993) has pursued VR since before Oculus Rift shipped, with professional stints at a major game studio building PlayStation VR apps.
- MIRAISE has already invested; the product is in beta with VTubers hosting limited-run events on weekends.
Why It Matters
- High-production virtual concerts today require motion capture rigs and large spaces, limiting even top VTubers to a few events per year; StarLi targets the gap below that.
- If avatar creation drops to smartphone-level cost and friction, the addressable market expands from niche VTubers to the much larger population of music streamers on YouTube and karaoke apps.
- The founders frame StarLi as an identity-liberating platform: people with physical limitations or who lack conventional stage presence could find audiences purely on vocal talent.
MIRAISE RADIO, miraise.vc · 2025-03-24 · Read the original
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