Seeing as my name has been called and the sacred rituals of summoning have been performed, I figure I might as well add my two cents. Jaaskinal has already made a post that I feel addresses most of your points quite well, so this may be redundant.
It is true that "faction tech" and the majority of their warships are not publically shared; this is a natural response, I think, and serves to protect the factions' own interests. There's nothing to really do about this one. The public builders are, frankly, primarily focussed on aesthetics; but there's nothing stopping you from refitting one of their (usually excellent-looking) hulls into a decent warship. Just remember to credit them!
And as Lecic said, not everything is locked away. In my signature you'll find just a couple of the items he referred to. I've also done a significant amount of work in calculating the formulas which Jump Drives use, and deriving them into useful graphs/spreadsheets. You'll find the key ones on the official starmade wiki, which has been linked already. I'm happy to publish more, should the need arise; their numbers outgrew what I felt was appropriate to list off on the wiki, is all.
Parts of the community are undeniably toxic; at this point, many of those parts have been appropriately punished. Bad apples become unbearably so, and are removed from the barrel. This is not new. I think that the recent council election has caused some of this upset, on account of some unexpected results, but at this point I think that all parties have acknowledged that the proper response is to shut up and watch, as users may find themselves suddenly matured by the responsibilities of council duty. Time shall tell.
As others have stated, Youtube content is hard to come by since the community is so small. There are a handful of decent youtubers/twitch streamers, but only Bench and, to an extent, Sven_the_Slayer have made tutorial videos, that I'm aware of. As to "look what I did" videos, I'd say that in most cases the mechanics used for these are either self-evident, and other players are able to observe the video and adapt its ideas to their own usage, or they're so simple that players already knew/can figure it out.
It is true that "faction tech" and the majority of their warships are not publically shared; this is a natural response, I think, and serves to protect the factions' own interests. There's nothing to really do about this one. The public builders are, frankly, primarily focussed on aesthetics; but there's nothing stopping you from refitting one of their (usually excellent-looking) hulls into a decent warship. Just remember to credit them!
And as Lecic said, not everything is locked away. In my signature you'll find just a couple of the items he referred to. I've also done a significant amount of work in calculating the formulas which Jump Drives use, and deriving them into useful graphs/spreadsheets. You'll find the key ones on the official starmade wiki, which has been linked already. I'm happy to publish more, should the need arise; their numbers outgrew what I felt was appropriate to list off on the wiki, is all.
Parts of the community are undeniably toxic; at this point, many of those parts have been appropriately punished. Bad apples become unbearably so, and are removed from the barrel. This is not new. I think that the recent council election has caused some of this upset, on account of some unexpected results, but at this point I think that all parties have acknowledged that the proper response is to shut up and watch, as users may find themselves suddenly matured by the responsibilities of council duty. Time shall tell.
As others have stated, Youtube content is hard to come by since the community is so small. There are a handful of decent youtubers/twitch streamers, but only Bench and, to an extent, Sven_the_Slayer have made tutorial videos, that I'm aware of. As to "look what I did" videos, I'd say that in most cases the mechanics used for these are either self-evident, and other players are able to observe the video and adapt its ideas to their own usage, or they're so simple that players already knew/can figure it out.