a very quick signal boost
May. 2nd, 2011 09:45 pmI've been meaning to post this for a while, and I wasn't around a computer much this weekend and didn't want to post it from my phone - I wanted to at least think about the words a little bit.
I use AO3; I like AO3, I like it a lot. I have friends who are on the OTW Board, who are involved in Tag Wrangling, who do other things I only vaguely know and understand. So I'm not really involved here - only peripherally.
But... that's kind of the problem (as I say in my comment), because I don't know much about AO3 or the OTW, and they really only appear in my personal fandom circle as "Here's a place you can post that has fixed most structural problems other sites have." They're not present, they're not visible, they're not welcoming. There's no community on AO3, and community is a big part of fandom.
And that sucks.
But it wouldn't be half as bad if I didn't keep hearing faint strains of, but we want you! We want to expand to tiny fandoms, to video games and anime, to non-Western fandoms; we want to involve you. But they don't, and they haven't, and it isn't like Final Fantasy fandom is dead, I compile
ff_press once a week, I run
ff_exchange; it sure isn't dead and it keeps getting revived every time Squeenix wants another $30 from my wallet.
But they say this, and do nothing; and then other things happen that really make me feel strange and unwelcome.
I know my Circle/FList is full of non-Western media fans: Final Fantasy fans, Chrono Trigger fans, other video game fans; anime fans, Sailor Moon and Cowboy Bebop and I don't even know what else fans; even JPop and KPop and other things that just aren't represented at all on the AO3, that don't see it anywhere in their fandoms, in their daily fannish functioning. We aren't there. A lot of us got mad/hurt/upset at Yuletide this year, too. And we still aren't there. And if you look at their latest poll... we still aren't there.
And so to you guys, I'd like to invite some conversation. You're welcome to do it in this entry if you're more comfortable with me - I'll pass it on to the relevant post. But you're also welcome to do it in a more appropriate place if you can please (a) remember to keep this person's fannish and Board identities separate, as they desire; and (b) are respectful to someone who put a lot of thought, time, and work into compiling a really interesting, informative, helpful, and - you know what - downright painful entry.
I offer up here, for perusal, The OTW Server Poll and Fannish Diversity.
Thoughts welcome, and thank you to the Board member who took the time to put this public, transparent, honest document together.
I use AO3; I like AO3, I like it a lot. I have friends who are on the OTW Board, who are involved in Tag Wrangling, who do other things I only vaguely know and understand. So I'm not really involved here - only peripherally.
But... that's kind of the problem (as I say in my comment), because I don't know much about AO3 or the OTW, and they really only appear in my personal fandom circle as "Here's a place you can post that has fixed most structural problems other sites have." They're not present, they're not visible, they're not welcoming. There's no community on AO3, and community is a big part of fandom.
And that sucks.
But it wouldn't be half as bad if I didn't keep hearing faint strains of, but we want you! We want to expand to tiny fandoms, to video games and anime, to non-Western fandoms; we want to involve you. But they don't, and they haven't, and it isn't like Final Fantasy fandom is dead, I compile
But they say this, and do nothing; and then other things happen that really make me feel strange and unwelcome.
I know my Circle/FList is full of non-Western media fans: Final Fantasy fans, Chrono Trigger fans, other video game fans; anime fans, Sailor Moon and Cowboy Bebop and I don't even know what else fans; even JPop and KPop and other things that just aren't represented at all on the AO3, that don't see it anywhere in their fandoms, in their daily fannish functioning. We aren't there. A lot of us got mad/hurt/upset at Yuletide this year, too. And we still aren't there. And if you look at their latest poll... we still aren't there.
And so to you guys, I'd like to invite some conversation. You're welcome to do it in this entry if you're more comfortable with me - I'll pass it on to the relevant post. But you're also welcome to do it in a more appropriate place if you can please (a) remember to keep this person's fannish and Board identities separate, as they desire; and (b) are respectful to someone who put a lot of thought, time, and work into compiling a really interesting, informative, helpful, and - you know what - downright painful entry.
I offer up here, for perusal, The OTW Server Poll and Fannish Diversity.
Thoughts welcome, and thank you to the Board member who took the time to put this public, transparent, honest document together.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 03:03 pm (UTC)Also - because I really haven't felt comfortable admitting this anywhere else, even on my own journal unless I lock it to private - I really don't understand why the Yuletide fandom incident was as big of a deal as it was. Yes, some larger fandoms were included in the INITIAL list. They were edited out a week later. And the moderators said that this might happen, and that if it did, they would take care of it. Which they did. I remember several different fandoms being the subject of frothing rage over being included, and I don't remember any of those fandoms showing up on the final list.
I can understand being upset about the Yuletide thing as a symptom of a larger issue. It's all of the rage and hate over the event itself that I don't quite get.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-05 12:25 am (UTC)Plus, not all the big fandoms were removed. I mean, hell, Pokemon was on the list, as was Warcraft. They were never removed despite people pointing out their size.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-05 03:22 pm (UTC)Thanks for the explanation; I appreciate it. :)
no subject
Date: 2011-05-16 09:18 pm (UTC)There's also the sort of in-groups within in-groups within in-groups problem with yuletide. I've seen people citing my own post as the prime example of an old guard attitude that yuletide "isn't for anime", when it was actually a rehash of the fact that the few old guard yuletiders who are in anime/manga/etc. fandoms have been whining about how bad yuletide is for those fandoms since the beginning (and so are irritated when people bring up "new" problems and refuse to listen when we say they aren't new and--however much we may wish otherwise--aren't likely to change). But a post like that looks quite different to anybody who doesn't share that same history of years of bitching about yuletide.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 02:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 07:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 12:08 pm (UTC)AO3 is the Archive Of Our Own, which is the "trendy cool new place everybody is posting"... I say that with adoring sarcasm, because it's an archive which has fixed 300% of the problems you get when posting to ff.net or even LJ. Any formatting you want within reason, all kinds of tags (including user-created tags!!), multichaptered stories, easy collab functions, no word count / length limit... Really, it is a great place to post. I don't have a lot migrated over there yet but it has been a huge relief to use, as ff.net gets worse and worse and LJ keeps either finding its limitations or just crapping out.
OTW is the Organization of Transformative Works; they are the organization behind the AO3 but they also do lots of things other than the AO3.
Basically, the discussion is about fandom representation on AO3, as per the OTW. Everyone wants AO3 to be open to all fandoms, to be diverse and awesome, but so far in its history both AO3 and the OTW have shown a pretty strong bias towards Western fandoms, and have left non-Western fandoms like video games, anime, manga, and even JPop and KPop out in the cold.
There are two basic issues to be aware of: Yuletide, and the server poll. Basically, Yuletide has become synonymous with the AO3, and even I don't know if it's an "official" AO3 event or if that's because Yuletide's moderators work with the AO3. Yuletide is meant to be a 'small fandoms only' exchange, but last year, they based the definition of 'small fandoms' solely on representation in AO3's archives. Thus, things like Sailor Moon were included in the initial Yuletide fandom list due to underrepresentation on AO3, while actual small fandoms like the Vorkosigan Saga who have found a nice home on AO3 were deemed "too large". Yuletide's mod teams ended up fixing most of the problems, but it highlighted a lot of the issues about AO3, diversity, representation, and assumptions that mods and "people in charge" made about AO3's current user base.
Recently, there was a poll to name the new servers. The post I have linked to talks about how that shook down, but basically, the end results are a lot of Star Trek and no representation from non-Western anything, no names that would mean anything to a fan like me. There is some discussion about how that came up and there was some discussion about how to fix it and it is of course a very complicated issue, and I don't want to demean it by trying to explain in two lines what ira_gladkova took so long to spell out. XD But it's a pretty interesting read, even if you have nothing else to add!
And dude, I can get you an AO3 account if you want to try posting up some fic... it's really a lot nicer than ff.net, except for the total and distinct lack of comments by people other than me .___.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 12:10 pm (UTC)Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 01:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 01:48 pm (UTC)The few times I looked at AO3, I got the impression it's very... not intending to sound insulting in case it does, but female-driven, in that the emphasis is on emotion rather than action, whereas in that balance I'd have to say I have more action than emotion (though I do try to incorporate emotion, just not as strongly as what women tend to write). Plus in making a lot of my writing NC-17, I add unusual kinks.
I'll be reading your link on the issue though.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 02:30 pm (UTC)There's a prevailing theme I'm finding. I got into fandom more than 10 years ago, and most of the people I knew from that time have left Japanese fandom to go to Western fandom. It's this feeling like J-stuff isn't good anymore and when you get older and mature you need to go to Western fandom.
OTW and AO3 need to work more on not alienating J-fandom.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:12 pm (UTC)I think fanfics ARE valuable, they allow people to share thoughts and feelings in a fictional manner and see things they'd never see in the canon, but I don't think they need to be put on a pedestal as on par with the original work.
Yet I also recently had a case where someone took fanfic writing so seriously they started insulting me as a person for not writing the kind of content they want to read. They honestly went to ridiculous lengths to look for insults to make toward me for story ideas they simply don't like, which gets wrapped up into what we're talking about here because at one point he (or she) said that when writing fanfics it's my "job" to write content the majority of people want to read.
tl;dr fanfiction is SRS BSNS.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 03:26 pm (UTC)Since then, Western media companies for video games at least have tried a lot harder to provide quality, resulting in games like Borderlands (if you like that) or Portal and Portal 2, or the new Mortal Kombat. By contrast, Japan's giving us crap like 3rd Birthday that rips out the soul of once respected series in hopes of selling on cheap and shameful gimmicks, and similarly a lot of video games and animes are falling into a trap set by going after only what they think will sell more copies of something. For example, if they think sex sells, they keep adding more boobs and sex scenes. If they think little girls sell more copies of something, they turn little girls into the focus and completely ignore viable storylines that don't involve little girls. Plus, of course, for anime there's a greater obsession with harem anime or yaoi-based stuff when we used to get great stuff like Rurouni Kenshin and Serial Experiments Lain.
There are still definitely some gems out there, to be sure. Demon's Souls is a damn fine game with amazing atmosphere, Valkyria Chronicles has many anime cliches but makes use of a war setting in fascinating ways, Bayonetta takes sex appeal and takes it into an overdrive parody that somehow becomes badass in the process, etc. It's just that all the uninspired lowest common denominator crap is burying the gems from view.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:33 pm (UTC)I like fandom, because I know, personally, I don't have the time or financial risk assessment to devote myself to a career in creative writing. But it's an easy way out for people who do and are afraid to take that step. Traditionally, men are more willing to risk taking that step than women, so yeah. You might say fandom is a bit anti-feminist in the creative genre; we neuter our own chances with it.
TOO SERIOUS SRSLY HUH?
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:41 pm (UTC)Additionally, while Star Trek was the first big fandom, and it's certainly filled with its infighting and age-old wars and Fans Behaving Badly - but so is any big fandom. The idea that I Should Be Taken Seriously Because of My Advanced Degree isn't rooted in ST fandom, it's rooted in academia. OTW's focus on Western fandom and fannish "legitimacy," IMHO, has much more to do with the white upper-class academic approach to a problem, rather than a bias for any Trek. A bunch of academics got together to solve what they perceived as a problem with the acceptability of fanworks, the execution of existing fanwork archive sites, etc, and they... wrote papers. And talked. And they did a bunch of work to create The Perfect Fanfic Archive, and stood back and went, "Look what we made!" And they told all their friends - who were also largely white, upper/middle class, educated, and - probably most importantly - older.
J-fandoms are largely skewed toward the young, probably as a combination of the fact that it's (at least perceived as being) "cartoon" based, sold at comic book stores, and with mostly young protagonists. It's hard to be an adult J-fan IRL - every time I walk into the comic book store when they're having an anime showing, I feel either like a giant creeper or like I should be yelling at everyone to get off my lawn. Plus, I'm 35, I'm not interested in shows where the protagonist is in high school. You can stand around the water cooler at the office and have a serious conversation about Lost; not so much about Naruto. In the same way that I'm not interested in a protagonist in high school, the 16-year-old J-fan isn't interested in shows where the protagonist is a 40-year-old divorced guy, or whatever. (Obviously there are exceptions, but this is how the demographic skews.)
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:46 pm (UTC)Short version: a) Academics don't know how to advertise. b) Random fans can't find the AO3, because of point a (I googled "fanfic" in December and it wasn't on the first three pages of results) and c) if they find it, they don't join, because you need an invitation and you're not going to get comments anyway, so why bother?
There was more, and it was AWESOME. I promise.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:48 pm (UTC)But like you said, "fan writers" can be good if they know what they're doing. I suppose it's the lack of them at Square-Enix that leads to me being pissed off at a lot of their products over the past 8 years, because the writers they have tend to go "fuck what everyone loved about this IP" and do whatever. Especially Toriyama. He loves to ruin things he didn't make himself. I've honestly seen terribly written fanfics with more respect to Square-Enix IPs than what he shows, with the crap he pulls it astounds me he still has a job.
For the record, I'm male. :)
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:51 pm (UTC)When I think of it this way, I can understand the OTW group having this sort of bias against the "younger" fan genres - the "Narutards" as I like to affectionately - OK, that was sarcastic - call them. I can tell from my own experience that a lot of these younger genres with younger themes and younger authors leads to the creation of sub-par works, if just for the simple fact that diversity, reality and life experience are lacking in what are basically an even split between romance and action stories coming out of those genres.
Not to say that there isn't a serious fanbase hidden within those groups too. I mean, I just have to point at myself here for that, haha! But then the question becomes, how do you siphon off the fandom elite, without sounding elitist? I don't think you can.
As an aside, I love learning, and I don't think the term ELITE is a derogatory one at all, in fact, I think of it as a compliment. But elitISM is a different beast entirely. I hate basing the legitimacy of things off of values such as higher education and the degrees associated with it. Perhaps this is just rub off from the tendency of politicians to demand that their PhDs be recognized to make them the more valid, intelligent candidate than the opposition, when in actuality the best politicians I have seen are usually the ones lacking the titles. For me, it seems a bit elitist to mention the boards' degrees of education in their writeups - what does that have to do with the price of rice in China?
As for taking fandom as a serious genre... see reply to Salarta about that for more detail, but I sometimes wonder if it really is a good idea to do that - especially in the case of women, I think it siphons off talent from the pool of original authors out there.
Thanks for the reply!
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:55 pm (UTC)Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 03:56 pm (UTC)Also as I said in a different comment, AO3 comes off as if by default certain types of fics aren't accepted or desired there even with good spelling and grammar, creative sentence structure, etc.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 04:05 pm (UTC)People like Mercedes Lackney "graduated" from fanfic to become original authors. But not many people make it over that hump, which I think is crippling. Now you could go off on all the crap that you meet in the publishing industry, too, but that is a whole other argument. In a way, self-e-publishing from places like Amazon is helping to combat that, but fanfiction is much more established, and IMO, much harder to break out of once you start, especially because you are burning up your good ideas on ideas you can't sell for a living, discouraging people from trying to make a living on those ideas at all.
I too love creating characters within existing universes because I don't have the time or want to put in the effort to create my own universes. But for the record, the "paid" fanfiction authors - otherwise known as the franchises - generally they tend to turn out horribly, particularly in movies. A whole series of Battletech and DnD novels come to mind right off the start.
I like fandom. I think it deserves a place and it's not going away, and good. But to try and establish it on the same par as original creation - whether you make money with it or not, and believe me, plenty of original authors who are quite good are not making money off of doing what they love - with fan writing just seems like effort which could be better directed elsewhere, like supporting struggling new authors.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 04:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 04:16 pm (UTC)Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 04:21 pm (UTC)If you're trying to get an "academic journal" off the ground, though, you really should be citing your qualifications to be editing an academic journal. And the academic journal aspect is not one that gets a lot of press in fandom circles, but it is there.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 04:23 pm (UTC)Just out of curiosity, where did you get the idea that they weren't smut-friendly or kink-friendly? Because my observations are just the opposite.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 04:30 pm (UTC)Shin Megami Tensei seems to be an anchor for a lot of the pre-2000s RPG fans right now though.
(I recently jumped into Warcraft. I'm still having trouble figuring out what's different about the fandom - if it was a JRPG, we'd be overrun by Illidan/Kael and the het shipwars between Jaina/Thrall, Jaina/Kael and Jaina/Arthas would be epic.)
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 04:32 pm (UTC)I really like the idea of fanwriting as legitimate. For obvious reasons - I spend a lot of time doing it and I get a lot out of it. I mean, a lot of hobbies are like that: I knit, but I don't do it to sell my knitting and make money. You sew, but (as far as I know XDD) it isn't to make a profit (although it is to save money, which is related). People garden for fun, create things for fun, and it can still be valued even if you're not redesigning a public park. Is it the loftiest of goals? Well, no, hahaha. But I can understand where they (the OTW and all) are coming from in terms of that!
I do also think there should be room for fanfiction authors to be able to develop into original work, again for personal reasons, and I think it would be more helpful if fanfiction weren't so looked down on.
I actually don't know much about Star Trek fandom so I do find all the background pretty fascinating there! I understand that it's a large established fandom and it isn't surprising that 3 Star Trek names won the server poll, based on that.
I don't know a lot about the OTW and their degrees, either, to be honest. Like I said -- I don't know a ton about them in general, and I think that's part of their problem; they seem to either think everyone knows who they are and what they do, or maybe not necessarily care about expressing it to new(-to-them) fandoms?
IN OTHER NEWS if you want an AO3 invite I will dig one up for you. I know you're not writing as much but it is a HUGE RELIEF to have somewhere to post that doesn't strip all your freaking formatting into a giant blob of no line breaks and missing quotation marks :D
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 04:41 pm (UTC)Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 04:54 pm (UTC)On account ... as I wrote in my reply to your linked post, not too eager to jump into a hostile environment, even if it is not hostile intentionally. But you know, living in Germany, I had enough of "hostility through omission" rather than "actively hostile" and for me they're nearly the same thing. Or more correctly, to be unwelcoming by accident bugs me more than to be unwelcoming by intent. You can debate with, change opinions on intent. Not knowing that you are being hostile makes it harder to point out that yes, this is a problem, because people don't get it IS a problem in the first place. Hence the problem...
Anyway back on track. Technical competence goes a long way in my book. I could give them a try but don't rush on it, because I barely have time to hit my computer as it is, and when I do, usually I have to work on my paid commissions. Today was like the exception to the rule. So, if you want to get back to me with that in a week, two weeks, a month, there is no fanfire being lit under my butt to transfer my stuff to a higher quality server.
On fandom being taken seriously ... I can see your guys points, no really. I know I sound brutal and uncompromising at times, but I do appreciate the effort and skill it takes to write GOOD fanfiction and that it shoudn't be undervalued as a creative genre. But I suppose I am coming more from the point of view of the artistic community, via the internet. It is already astoundingly hard for artists to make money off of their work ... unless you are already well established, even if you are talented the majority of people think your images should be free for the taking, or that you should give them away at prices that don't allow you to sustain yourself. After all it is "just" art. Now factor into this fanart. I sympathize greatly with the creators in this case, because I know how hard it is to sell art personally. People go off and make fan works of your things, and they can be beautiful and great, but then, some people try to charge money for things YOU created, or give away copies of things you are trying to sell for free... I have even heard "but I put a copyright with your name on it!" to justify this kind of stuff. I think fandom being taken "seriously" makes it that much harder for original artists to earn money with what they do, and thereby cuts down on the number of people who try, or can succeed. We all need to eat. This argument passes over to the music industry quite often too, in the terms of MP3 sharing and stuff.
I do not NOT like fandom. But traditionally, to establish as a real genre means to be able to earn money with it, and that can just get... messy.
Wish I could be more clear here, but it is hard to be articulate on the Wii. :P
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 04:59 pm (UTC)WIN WIN
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 05:01 pm (UTC)Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 05:33 pm (UTC)That's my take, though. Supposedly, his writing would be good/decent if it was for original IPs.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 05:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 05:57 pm (UTC)Most of what I remember seeing there (don't want to go to it right now as I am at work) is romance, friendship or on rare occasion crossover, and the only one I recall noticing that had any kink element was the awesome Y-R-P FF crossover (which I requested way back) that had Rosa for R. I also vaguely remember a 'xeno' tag.
The idea of making your own tags sounds cool though, since when I upload my regular fics to AFF and H-F, I end up using the 'Other' warning then listing kinks.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 06:02 pm (UTC)But when I browse other fandoms of mine (say, Criminal Minds, or something) that are pretty well represented, there is a lot of kink. And I really like the way that it is labeled and done.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 06:08 pm (UTC)Considering that, my guess is they moved to those shows for the same reason I don't write many FF4 fics anymore even though I love the game to pieces. The old stuff can get a little boring to work with after a while, while the new stuff sucks (I mean in general, though in my personal opinion this applies to FF4:TA too). The shows you mentioned present something new to try out and enjoy, sort of like the thrill of opening a new box of
chocolatesvideo game and exploring that new world. There's also a fair amount of uniqueness to the new stuff, clever ideas and such, whereas Japanese video games and anime are starting to slip into finding out whatever seems to be popular at the time and recycling it.Which makes it not too surprising that more video game companies are talking about how they want to enter the FPS market after seeing the success of Call of Duty. It's making Activision a lot of money, so these companies are going to milk it until it's dry. I miss the old Japanese creative appreciation and yearning.
That's my take on the situation anyway! :)
no subject
Date: 2011-05-03 06:10 pm (UTC)Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 06:54 pm (UTC)More seriously, I think the problem with SqEn games at the moment is that they aren't encouraging new talent to push in new directions, but sticking with things they think are "safe" - and therefore boring. And that is driving the new talent out to new companies. I think the biggest tell for this are all the great games that have been made by the talent SqEn has bled - Shadow Hearts and Lost Odyssey come to mind, though I know there are more. Then compare what they're making now - remakes of the early FF games, a Parasite Eve sequel that looks suspiciously like PE1, and their good sellers at the moment are Kingdom Hearts games - which they collaborate with Disney on, so they're not exactly "original" either. They even finally found a good musical replacement for Uematsu - Hamauzu - and come to think of it, he did a good job on Dirge of Cerberus, too - and that guy has already signed off from SqEn after FF13.
They just need to give new guys with radical ideas a chance. And stop bleeding the talent that they do have!
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 06:58 pm (UTC)Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 07:14 pm (UTC)Which is why I decided after 3rd Birthday's Japanese release this past winter that if they don't make a real Parasite Eve sequel next that retcons 3rd Birthday, brings back the REAL Aya and gets a lot more promotion from Square-Enix, I'm never buying anything from them again for the rest of my life. Such is my absolute disgust with the way they operate and what they did to one of the few great female protagonists to ever grace the video game medium, all because of a mix of CEOs desperately hoping lowest common denominator would sell more copies, and the creative team decided to treat the IP like a chance to make their hentai fanfic desires into canon. Also Toriyama needs to stop being such an asshole that he turns established characters into his self-inserts (Brother being a pervy incestuous cousin to Yuna in FFX-2, and Maeda being an all-out perverted creep toward Aya in 3rd Birthday).
So really it's a mix of problems. The higher-ups need to stop pressuring teams to do "what'll sell more copies" according to the marketing team's bull, and the creative teams need to give more of a damn about the IPs they're working with. Because at this point, I'd sooner pay beginning fanfic writers to make these games than the people S-E has working for them.
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 07:20 pm (UTC)THEY WILL FEEL MY WRATH
This also makes me happy to have not bought a copy of 3rd Birthday, though that much was clear for me by looking at the cover art.
But Maeda? Really? I loved him in the first game. He was so socially awkward and nerdy and adorable. And now he's a hentai otaku? ;__;
*pump gun*
Re: Hmm.
Date: 2011-05-03 07:35 pm (UTC)I'm not joking.
I'm not sure what to think and expect right now. In a reasonable company that actually cares about its fans and IPs, and wants to maintain a good image, I would expect them to retcon 3rd Birthday and make a real sequel that cleans up the mess made by Toriyama and Tabata. But... this is Square-Enix. They seem to enjoy reinforcing terrible directions that they take their IPs, which makes me expect they're going to try to cement 3rd Birthday as Parasite Eve universe canon and ruin the characters further with another "sequel."