
Now, YouTubers Life 2 gives everyone a much more refined, stylistic, and polished look that is much more pleasing to the eye. The art direction YouTubers Life 2 has this time around also makes it much more appealing, whereas the first title saw a very bland recreation of what could effectively be a Mii. Going from a more Sims-esque gameplay to a simplistic but humble open-world-ish RPG approach, YouTubers Life 2 is accessible for just about any age group and demographic looking for a laid-back adventure game that won't ask too much of you except for a bit of forgiveness with the repetitive nature of its gameplay. YouTubers Life 2 is a vastly different experience from its predecessor but benefits from this change in just about every way. Despite its title sounding like a potential shovelware game, though, YouTubers Life 2 is a surprisingly fun and enjoyable time that's easy to find yourself spending hours in, even when you only meant to spend a few minutes thank to its easy pick-up-and-play system and design. YouTube, much like any career path that has no guarantee of success, is also a game of playing the algorithms, SEOs, and marketing, and it's this sort of mentality that YouTubers Life 2, just like its predecessor, works with to have players build their new channel and empire from.


It's become a career path, a way to teach, a way to inform, a way to find new hobbies, friends, and so much more to people of all sorts of ages, backgrounds, and demographics and instilled now in our day-to-day lives.

Now being the second most visited site on the internet with some of the highest desktop shares for any site or application - alongside the fact that YouTube takes up the bulk of most people's bandwidth usage - there's no denying how YouTube has become more than just a site for videos, but a genuine tool to help grow, learn, live, and entertain. When YouTube came into existence not long after the internet started to find its footing and becoming such a core part of our lives in the early 2000s, I don't think anyone could have predicted the sheer magnitude and behemoth it would become before being bought by Google.
