How the Community Participates

A complete overview of how Eurovision fans collaborate, vote, create and contribute to simulations and fan‑made projects.

1. Voting in Fan Simulations

One of the most common ways fans participate is by voting in simulations.
Creators often open public forms or polls where fans submit their rankings.

These votes are then converted into:
• Jury rankings
• Televote totals
• Combined results

This makes the community an active part of the outcome.

2. Creating Graphics and Visuals

Many fans contribute by designing visuals for simulations.
This includes:
• Jury Cards
• Televote Cards
• Qualification reveal graphics
• Scoreboards
• Thumbnails and banners

Tools like ESC Card Generator make it easy for fans to create professional‑looking visuals that match the Eurovision style.

3. Sharing Predictions and Rankings

Fans love discussing their predictions and personal rankings.
These conversations happen on:
• Twitter/X
• TikTok
• Reddit
• Discord servers
• YouTube comments

Predictions often inspire new simulations or influence how creators design their projects.

4. Participating in Live Premieres

Many simulations are premiered live on YouTube or Twitch.
Fans join the chat to react in real time to:
• Jury reveals
• Televote totals
• Qualification announcements
• Final results

This creates a shared viewing experience similar to the real Eurovision broadcast.

5. Collaborating on Large‑Scale Projects

Some simulations involve dozens or even hundreds of fans working together.
These projects may include:
• Fan‑run national finals
• Multi‑season contests
• International juries
• Community‑driven scoreboards

Collaboration is one of the strongest aspects of the Eurovision fan community.

6. Creating Commentary and Reactions

Many fans contribute by creating commentary videos, reaction clips or analysis posts.
These add personality and storytelling to simulations.

Popular formats include:
• Reaction videos
• “My top 37” rankings
• Jury‑style commentary
• Live discussion panels

This content helps simulations reach wider audiences.

7. Running Their Own Contests

Some fans go even further and create their own Eurovision‑style contests.
These can include:
• Original songs
• Fan‑made entries
• Country assignments
• Full voting sequences

ESC Card Generator is often used to give these contests a professional, ESC‑inspired look.

8. Why Community Participation Matters

The Eurovision fandom is one of the most active and creative communities in the world.
Community participation keeps the contest alive all year and strengthens the connection between fans.

Through collaboration, creativity and shared passion, simulations become more than just numbers —
they become a celebration of Eurovision itself.