For Su Huai, acquiring equity in a live streaming platform wasn't of particularly great significance.
Even though Gou Star would go public along with Tencent Music Entertainment, as a minority shareholder waiting four or five years for a return after the IPO—and tying Pei Shuyu to such a minor platform in the process—the value calculated wasn't that high.
However, looking at it from Xingyu's perspective, the situation was obviously different.
Having a certain shareholding versus none at all made a huge difference in terms of speaking rights.
Gou Star was willing to hand over such authority, which was very sincere.
Su Huai calculated how much he could gain from the deal and decisively shook hands with Gou Star to make peace.
"I feel your sincerity, ok, what do you need me to do?"
They definitely had conditions for Su Huai; benefits wouldn't come for free.
However, since Gou Star was the weaker party, they didn't dare to set particularly harsh terms.