VTubers are descending on L.A. with multiple concerts

Kou Mariya hasnβt shown her work to her family. Thatβs because Mariya, not her real name, is living a dual identity, and to protect her privacy, only the most sacred of confidants β or business partners β can know her true persona.
Mariya, to her more than 84,000 followers on YouTube, is a friendly, flirtatious vampire singer, as excited to chat about her digitized outfits and accessories as she is to sing a late β90s pop song. She performs as an animated avatar using motion capture technology, which matches her facial expressions and body movements to the drawn figure.
Mariya spends a significant portion of her days as this cartoon character, at once wholly real while being completely artificial. She is a professional performer, although her stage is virtual. Instead of a glimpse into a room or a home, her surroundings are fully drawn β she could be in a beach setting one day and an ornate office the next.
As a VTuber β that is, virtual YouTuber β Mariya is part of a movement, one led by those weaned on Japanese animation who are now finding ways to make fantasy world-building feel individualized and personal. We connect via video conferencing software, her location in the U.S. a secret, and Mariya appears in her anime form, her silver-white hair occasionally obscuring her welcoming oval eyes, which blink often as she speaks. Her voice is friendly and warm, and it ever-so-slightly dips into an upper register when she laughs or needs to emphasize a point. She nervously chuckles that sheβll be aged βso badβ when she admits the first anime she fell in love with was βSpeed Racer.β Whether Iβm talking to Mariya the vampire character or Mariya the performer is never quite clear.

Kou Mariya, hosting a Thursday night concert in Hollywood, is a friendly vampire VTuber.
(Kou Mariya)
This weekend Mariya will be hosting a concert in Hollywood with other popular VTubers. There will be live musicians, but the VTubers will be virtual. Mariya says sheβll be performing from an off-site location to protect her identity.
Those in Los Angeles will have multiple opportunities to take part in a VTuber crash course over the Fourth of July holiday. Mariya on Thursday will host the Fantastic Reality concert at the Vermont Hollywood, a performance that makes virtual and real musicians and features Ironmouse, a horned, operatic demon who was briefly the most subscribed streamer on Twitch.
Even more mainstream, a host of VTubers associated with Japanese firm Hololive will invade Dodger Stadium for the second year in a row. Saturday eveningβs Hololive Night will feature three of companyβs English-speaking talents β Ninomae Inaβnis, IRyS and Koseki Bijou β virtually cheering on the team, singing the seventh-inning stretch and then leading a post-game dance party on the field. A special event ticket will include playing cards of the VTubers.
Hololive, a division of Cover Corp., is one of the largest VTuber talent agencies in the world, with almost 90 active performers across its various divisions. The companyβs U.S. office is based in L.A., and its partnership with the Dodgers is to recognize, in part, that the team has a large Japanese fanbase, thanks to megastar Shohei Ohtani. Cover CEO Motoaki Tanigo, however, has a broader goal, and thatβs to further bring VTubers to the masses.
βThere are two reasons,β Tanigo says, via a translator, for why Cover has targeted L.A. as one of its key markets. The first, he notes, is due to the fact that a large part of the companyβs fanbase resides in the L.A. region. The second, he stresses, relates to his business goals, especially the video game firms Cover hopes to partner with. βDoing events in the Los Angeles area is not only important for our user engagement, but itβs a great opportunity to show to our business clients that we have a strong following.β
VTubers have averaged 50 billion YouTube views annually over the past three years, according to a recent YouTube Culture & Trends report. A YouTube sample of 300 virtual creators found that they drove 15 billion views across the site, with 1 billion coming from the U.S. alone. Almost all of these VTubers are steeped deeply in anime lore, culture and tone. And while there are popular male VTubers, a number of the most famous are female-facing. Coverβs roster, for instance, is more than three-quarters female.

Hololive characters on the Dodger Stadium scoreboard at last yearβs event. Hololive Night returns on July 5.
(Cover Corp.)
βItβs very exciting,β says Susan Napier, author of βMiyazakiworld: A Life in Artβ and professor at Tufts University who specializes in Japanese culture. βIt allows for an enormous amount of creativity, and a real sense of ownership over your creation, and a way of playing and melding with your creation. People have been fans and identifying with favorite stories, anime and manga for years. This is, in a way, a very old phenomena. Itβs people wanting to participate in a fantasy world that they love.β
Mariya notes she decided to become a VTuber during the worst days of the global pandemic of 2020. βEveryone was in front of their computers and had a sense of loneliness,β she says. βAnd VTubers [had] that sense of, βIβm not alone. Iβm not trapped. Thereβs a whole world out there for me.β Being a big fan of that, I wanted to try that myself. I did not expect to be able to make this into a career, but somehow people liked me, and I thought I could keep going with this.β
And how, of course, did she land on her character, a vampire with a bat clip in her hair and an open-chested cocktail server-style outfit? βThat one is tricky because technically I was born a vampire,β Mariya says. βWeβre not scary. We ask permission before entering doors, which is better than a lot of people. We do bite. Thatβs the only downside.β Right.
Weβre not scary. We ask permission before entering doors, which is better than a lot of people. We do bite. Thatβs the only downside.
β Kou Mariya, on being a vampire VTuber
The Japan-led VTtuber trend predates the pandemic. The first proper virtual artist to gain fame is widely credited as Kizuna AI in 2016, but VTubers have grown alongside other similar developments. See, for instance, virtual concert artist Hatsune Miku, who performed at Coachella in 2024. VTubers are also closely aligned with video games, often streaming them for their fans. The game medium, of course, has long been associated with virtual avatars, be it Nintendo Mii figures, the personas of βSecond Lifeβ or todayβs platforms of βFortnite,β βRobloxβ and βMinecraft.β And this summer, in one of the biggest releases of 2025, VTuber Usada Pekora has a role in the PlayStation 5 game βDeath Stranding 2,β with famed director and auteur Hideo Kojima admitting he is a fan.
For creator, voice-over actor and Anime Expo attendee AmaLee, the rare VTuber who, while using a stage name, does show her face, animeβs fantastical yet mature storylines reached her as a young teen when she was exploring her creativity. βItβs bridging a gap,β she says of VTubing. βEver since I was a teenager I loved anime. Itβs music, beautiful animation and acting all in one. VTubing brings it into the real world. You can do so much with your VTuber lore story. Youβre kind of creating your own anime.β

VTuber Ironmouse will perform at the Fantastic Reality concert on Thursday.
(Ironmouse)
The most appealing VTubers bring a level of real-life authenticity into their work. βIf you go back and watch my very first streams, Iβm very cemented in this cleanly elegant actor [persona],β AmaLee says. βMy voice is different. I dropped it to be cooler. I realized quickly how hard that was to keep, and I didnβt like not being authentically me. Iβm a little clumsy, a little blond and I have major tech issues.β
Mariya describes herself as introvert, saying she wouldnβt be streaming β or likely even performing β if it werenβt for VTubing.
βWith VTubing, thereβs a sense of anonymity that I think is really good for the audience as well,β Mariya says. βSome people donβt want to see a physical person in front of a screen. They want to see anime girls. I think people latch onto the idea that itβs something that is different and bigger than me and bigger than them. Itβs a new world.β

Last yearβs Hololive Night at Dodger Stadium featured a drone show. Look for an on-field dance party led by the VTubers this year.
(Cover Corp. )
Author and professor Napier says itβs a modern, digitized Renaissance faire, if you will, reflecting basic human desires to dress up and play. As for why it just so happens to be so connected to anime, Napier theorizes the medium fosters the idea of fantasy creation.
βFantasy and science fiction are very popular culture artistic venues to play and to cosplay,β Napier says. βAnime is really good at presenting you with these β itβs brilliantly expansive. Whatever youβre into, youβll find it in anime. So if youβre looking to VTube, thereβs all this anime material sitting in front of you. You can pick and choose and start playing.β
The dream for the Cover corporation, says Tanigo, is to expand VTubers beyond the world of streaming sites such as YouTube and Twitch β hence, the Dodgers collaboration. In August, Hololive will stage another U.S. concert, this time at Radio City Musical Hall in New York. Music, says Tanigo, is a gateway. βI believe thatβs a way of reaching new people,β he says. βItβs an interesting thing to go see. There are also people who may not be interested in VTubing or anime at all, but they can listen to the song thatβs released and enjoy it as a piece of music on its own.β
For the performers, with VTubing comes a sense of safety β and even comfort β that isnβt always present in more traditional streaming.
βI did a lot of on-camera streaming in the beginning of my streaming career, but I hated having to get ready, do my makeup, wear something nice,β AmaLee says. βEven after an hour of getting ready to do a stream, someone was still [commenting], βYou look tired today.β I hated that. There would be days I would cancel streams because I didnβt want to get ready. Now I have my VTuber model and can be a little gremlin in my pajamas and no one has to know because Monarch is always perfect.β
An anime character, after all, is always ready to go.