- Dec 16, 2010
- 112
- 119
I think they don't want those site shut down but to better comply with DMCA alike, and guide people to sites that do provide legal content, something like crunchyroll?
On that thought, how would sites like anime-sharing "comply with DMCA"? It's not like we have licences to the anime like crunchyroll to the point we can stream it, nor do we have any permission to "share" games as we do here. (For which, by the way, I thank you for uploading a large majority of the games I want)
Yes, maybe they want these sites to comply with DMCA, but there's no way in hell it can be online without going against it.
To be fair, on the plus side, most if not all eroge―those are what you're referring to by games priced at ~$100 each, right?―come with trials.
Your reasoning for this one is flawed due to your assumption that trials are a good representation of the game as a whole, and boy are you in the wrong. Just as how advertising involves the emphasizing of the goods while sweeping the bads under the rug, that's exactly what happens in trials of games.
One of the prime examples is Sakusaku. People who played the trial was screaming about how it should be released earlier, but what happened to the game itself? Shit. (I skip through the details because people who have actually played the game would know what I mean)
Plus, people like me have no time to play trials, THEN play the game if I like it. Call it a crappy excuse as you'd like, but I'd rather get the full steak instead of the sliver of meat on the side.
To be fair, I think you're underestimating the value of Fanservice Unleashed™ that blu-rays bring. (Or, in other words, let's artificially limit the value of our fanservice by imposing visual censorship on TV and then unleash its full potential on overpriced plastic discs! Yay!) But, in fact, that adds more credibility to the notion that customers purchase something because they see value in it, not because they have no other option: when someone buys a blu-ray, she's getting all the extra value that the other option―watching TV―doesn't provide: uncensored content, better visual and audio quality, the ability to watch at her convenience, etc, etc.
This is the exact reason why I would download my anime instead of streaming them. Despite this, I never really understood the point of Blu-rays except for the fanservice, which only the low self esteem, sex-driven weeaboos would go for.
Fanservice is the very reason why I left anime completely, too. It's just stupid and unnecessary; and if I wanted to fap, there's so many other things I'd use instead of peach-colored melons pressing against my screen.
Oh wait, Blu-rays come with bonuses: I forgot about those. I know of people who buy these CDs exclusively for these bonuses and pretty much throws the CD aside, which defeats the entire purpose
And then the argument about "losses" loses a great deal of credibility when you extend it to non-blu-ray anime downloads: for those living in Japan, it's akin to being lazy and downloading a copy from someone who took the liberty of recording a show with her DVR instead of doing it on your own. For foreigners, what other choice do foreigners have? Oh, sure, it'll only take a couple years for most anime currently airing on TV to be available on foreign cable TV networks (not to mention thefactstereotype that most foreigners interested in Japanese stuff are probably cord cutters).
I mean, they gotta send letters to each other to clear the licensing matters and then ship the copies of those shows to the other countries, right? What's that? The Internet? No, no way a network with such capabilities exists. You young hippies and your fantasies.
Now I'm not sure how this works, but it's actually possible to watch Korean Dramas in the US (insert the most obnoxious and sarcastic gasp here).
Same with anime. All you need is a channel that broadcasts the anime to the other countries, and there you have it: the foreigners watching anime the same way as the Japanese and it's strangely not illegal.
What? Translations? Fuck those and the weebs who need it. (Okay, fine. The broadcasters can translate them)
What? That costs money? Well, isn't that what are the anime goods for? Oh wait, the anime has sponsors too. Leech more money off of them.
/sarcasm