Annemunition Lesbian

Annemunition Lesbian




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Annemunition Lesbian
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© ® 2022 • Anne Munition and the AM logo are trademarks of Anne Munition, LLC • All rights reserved.

When I was seven, my mom bought my siblings and I our first gaming console. It was a Super Nintendo and we spent all our time outside of schoolwork playing Super Mario World. Growing up with an older brother, my interest in shooters developed as he and I both got older. I strongly consider our N64 to be my "gateway drug" into the world of first-person shooters - after all, GoldenEye 007 is truly one of the great, classic video games of the 90s.
Enter the era of online console shooters. When the original Xbox was released in 2001, my sister and I quickly jumped on the Halo: Combat Evolved hype train. We spent hours upon hours playing Halo 2 and subsequently Halo 3 on Xbox Live throughout high school. While I was always interested in PC gaming, I never really knew how to get into it and stuck with console gaming until college.
Sadly, college marked a time devoid of gaming for me. I worked constantly, often multiple jobs at once, and had little to no time for gaming. While I'd still accept the occasional Halo 3 1v1 challenge from a friend or two in my dorm, I basically made no time for gaming. I was doggedly focused on The Grind, doing my best to provide for myself while attending a four-year university.
This continued past college, when I was hired to work in an office as the in-house UI/UX designer. I had studied graphic design in college and figured that my career consisted of pushing pixels and meticulously adjusting vectors for the foreseeable future.
I was bored. My job, while steady income and easy enough, was just that - easy. It was simply not challenging me. I would ask my team leader for more work but often just wasn't given enough to do. I stumbled across Twitch in an article online while I was browsing at work (what else do you do once you've finished all your work?) and started watching streams in the background while I designed and wireframed and sketched.
The more I watched Twitch streams, the more I started entertaining the idea of starting my own channel. I was enthralled by the little communities comprised of people from all over the world, coming together to bond over a video game and to share in the live experience. I started hatching my plans and gathering ideas from watching other streamers and learning what I thought made someone a Good Streamer versus a Bad Streamer (or just a streamer I didn't want to be).
When I started streaming, it was in the evening hours late when I got off work. I'd stream for only a few hours on weekdays, and then for long hours on weekends. But right away, I was hooked. It was amazing. It was exciting. It was refreshing. And I couldn't get enough.
I quickly began pouring all my free time and all my extra energy into streaming. At work, after I'd finished everything expected of me, I'd work on designs for my Twitch channel. I'd watch other streamers in a variety of categories which gave me a lot of insight into the world of professional streaming from streamers who had years more experience than me.
Somehow, whether through good fortune or hard work (probably a combination of both), my channel took off right from the get-go. I was accepted into the Twitch Partner program less than two months into my streaming career. As my channel grew over the first year, I started to realize I had a real opportunity to turn my passion into a career. The problem being that my full-time job as a graphic designer was simply in the way of me really pursuing my dream of being a full-time broadcaster.
So I quit my job. It was one of the most terrifying and rewarding things I've ever done and I can say now, looking back, that it was 100% worth it. Now, I stream full-time, I attend gaming conventions both for fun and for work, and I get to travel more than I ever did before. Streaming is very hard work, despite what some people might think. It's a lot of long hours, late nights, and sometimes seemingly insurmountable stress that comes with being self-employed.
But I have never loved a job or a hobby so much as I love streaming. I look forward to streaming for many years to come.
Where are you from?
Southern California (LA-area).
How long have you been streaming?
I started streaming June 3, 2014. I was partnered on July 18, 2014. I quit my job and went full-time with streaming on June 26, 2015.
What are some of your favorite games?
The Witcher 3, Escape From Tarkov, The Last of Us, the Uncharted series, Rainbow Six: Siege, God of War (2018), and the Elder Scrolls series.


What kind of music do you listen to?
My Last.fm page will provide the most detail. I listen to a variety of music but my favorite genres are alternative metal and rock, metalcore, and classic rock. Some of my favorite bands are Tool, Deftones, Pink Floyd, Mastodon, Thrice, and Killswitch Engage. I'm also a huge fan of Beyoncé, mo-town, minimal piano music, and a variety of singer-songwriters of all styles.

People are always asking about my tattoos on stream, so here's the rundown of my seven tattoos.
I got my first tattoo a few months after I turned 18 and it's some script text on my ribs that reads "We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars". The quote is from a story written by Oscar Wilde called Lady Windemere's Fan.
My half-sleeve is a custom illustration from a scene in A Hero of Our Time by Mikhail Lermontov. It depicts a girl in a rowboat amidst stormy seas and the text underneath reads "Bold is the heart that steers her through the night" .
I have a star on my right wrist. Growing up, my mom called my siblings and I her 'sun, moon, and star' and I was the 'star'. So my mom and I got matching star tattoos.
On my left wrist is the Jedi Order emblem with text that reads "A New Hope" .
I have a tattoo on the side of my right hand that says "Windsor" , which was the name of a labrador my family got when I was seven and he passed away when I was 20. I got his name tattooed on my hand the day that he passed.
On my right forearm is an Arabian horse, which my mom has always loved and wanted, and the sun, moon, and star, are emblematic of my siblings and I.
I have a simple tattoo on my left forearm of the inscription from Ciri's sword in The Witcher 3.


I'm a Twitch.tv video game broadcaster and self-proclaimed Queen of the Burgers. Here you'll find my various thoughts on life and streaming; if you have questions, just ask .


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In light of today’s amazing news ( the Supreme Court ruled same-sex marriage legal in all 50 states ), I figured it was a good time to address something I’ve kind of glossed over the past year or so I’ve been streaming. If you’ve been paying attention, I doubt you’ll be very surprised by this confession, but maybe explaining myself fully will help everyone understand where I’m coming from.
How does that work? Well, most people are used to the traditional sexual identities of straight/heterosexual, gay/homosexual, and bisexual. I believe human sexuality is a bit more complicated than that, which can be explained in part by the Kinsey Scale . Basically, the Kinsey Scale gives us a range of sexualities from 0 to 6 - zero being completely heterosexual, six being completely homosexual, and a variety of sexualities in between.
It’s important to note that the scale doesn’t cover 100% of sexuality issues/debates and doesn’t account for various non-binary gender identities. Since I’m comfortable with my gender being female, it works for me in this instance. But that’ll vary person-to-person.
So, if I were to assign myself a place on the Kinsey Scale, I’d probably be a 4 or a 5. Typically, people would consider this “bisexual” (which would be a 3 on the Kinsey Scale), but I really shy away from the term because it ignores my bias toward homosexuality. In my life, I’ve mostly dated women and only a few men. But I don’t discount the possibility that I might be interested in dating a guy (as I have been attracted to and interested in men in the past), so I can’t consider myself “gay” or “lesbian”, in my eyes.
I don’t know precisely why, but my personality makes me want to remain as impartial as possible in as many situations as I can. When I started streaming, I realized that aligning oneself with certain ideas can sometimes alienate others by nature. Every person, regardless of their upbringing, will have natural biases and pre-formed judgements about people of other backgrounds. It’s inescapable, but not inherently a negative or positive thing. It just is. So one of the reasons I never talk about my ethnicity on stream is because I prefer being detached from specific ethnic identities. If people can’t pinpoint it, there’s nothing there to discuss, positive or negative. Which means that more people can feel connected, because we’re not separated by any ideas of ethnicity.
I hope that all made sense, because it’s how I explain why I never talk about my sexuality either.
If I never specifically define my sexuality, it avoids any potential disconnections between me and you. We can just watch and play video games as human beings. We’re above gender, ethnicity, sexuality, religious beliefs, etc. We’re just people hanging out together. Also, it’s a bit complicated to describe the whole Kinsey Scale thing while being Batman. :)
When I wrote my earlier post about fighting depression and struggling through some very hard times in my life, it was very hard of me to be that open with strangers. It’s completely outside of my natural way, which is to be cryptic and vague about myself (anneKappa). But I was greeted with so many heart-warming messages from people thanking me for writing that blog post and telling me that I had given them a bit of hope and motivation to work.. I never expected such beautiful responses.
I started realizing that me being honest with you about myself was another way for us to connect and encourage each other to grow personally. You guys are smart enough to see past divisions like sexuality and these talks can help us further the dialogue which can hopefully inform and educate others.
Does your family know? Yes, I’ve been “out” to my family since I was about 13 or 14 years old. In fact, when I came out to my mom, she just said “I know, I’ve always known” and that was it. My family has always been very accepting.
So you’ve dated women and men? Yes. I don’t exclusively date women, which is why I don’t tell people I’m “gay”.
When did you know you weren’t straight? Pretty much forever. I only really realized I wasn’t 100% homosexual when I was about 19 or 20, until then I had told everyone I was gay.
If you have any other questions, I’m happy to answer (within reason). You can ask them here: http://ask.fm/AnneMunition
Thank you, as always, for your understanding and support. You’re adorable. Have a great day.

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