Uncut Anime Coming to a Major Game Console | |
Sounds interesting, it'll come down to the quality of the translation and the amount of quality shows to decide whether or not this service will be worth it. | |
This sounds like a 360 thing to me. Something like would have probably happened in Japan first if it were the PS3 and MS have been all over this console/TV thing of late | |
"it'll still have ads despite being a subscription service. It'll work like a traditional channel, rather than an on-demand " No no no no. Just make it a TV channel if you're going to do that. | |
Gee i wonder which console that will be. It's obviously not going to be the xbox, it's ever done too well over there. Probably won't be Nintendo, the percentage of people who still actually use their Wii and aren't under 15 or over 40 has got to be in the single digits. So yeah, I wonder which one. So mysterious. On a more serious note, even if I was interested in paying for this, I'd have to wait to see if the voice acting and translation weren't garbage, as they often are. | |
there is tons of good anime out there to build an anime service on but that list of shows common. inyuasha is one of the all time weakest animes ever made and up there near the most annoying. shippuden would be good if they cut out all the filler in it but its been forever since i could stand to sit down and watch the series with all the extra junk they pile in. get some fullmetal alchemist, code geass, cowboy bebob, darker than black, toss in some gundam good mecha series, a few others and then you got something. really hope they got more going on than that and maybe this talking head is tossing out shows he thinks is popular because they were on cartoon network. | |
I'm interested but it ultimately comes down to the quality and selection... assuming it'll even be available outside the US[1]. It's a little frustrating how often something is offered within the US but not within Canada[2], or even when the content available within a service varies greatly between the two. Netflix comes to mind... bloody Netflix. Anime isn't cheap or easily available within Canada, so fingers crossed! | |
Well out with this Toonami fandom. | |
Good for Canada. I can't fathom why they would make it like a traditional channel rather than an on-demand service. Don't we already have TV for that? | |
I did read that, but until it's officially announced, I'm gonna assume it'll be similar to most services offered in NA, where it's strictly a US service. Or (nearly) worse, when it's available within both countries, but with vastly differing selection/content available. So, I suppose I just don't want to allow myself to believe the article, at least not yet. | |
Viz don't own the rights to any of the shows that you've recommended, but it is possible that they could work out a partnership deal with Funimation and Bandai to get those shows on their service. | |
Pfft! Big whoop! I can find anime in most corners of the internet rather easily these days so i fail to see any need to use this servi-
Screw my previous statement, I'm in! | |
Wish the UK would get this, there is no legal way to watch anime here unless you buy a DVD/Bluray which can get very pricey. | |
Is it just me, or does this sound much, much, much worse than crunchyroll? I know not everyone likes Subs, but still. | |
Sounds interesting!
Well, fuck that shit. | |
At first I was like: "Crap it's only in North America!" I'm sure there are some good dubs out there. I just have yet to find one. | |
Also? >it'll still have ads despite being a subscription service Why does anything work this way?! | |
At first I was excited and then I saw the word "dubbed." Frack that. I have only ever run into one good dub (Hellsing) and the rest are at their best merely tolerable. It's the same reason that anime on Netflix sucks balls. No subs available, have to listen to the mediocre english VAs. | |
OT: It'll be hard to sell something in a country that's been pirating and otherwise viewing the content for free for years and years. It's like trying to sell milk to a farmer. | |
I was originally interested, but dubs? No thanks. Had there been an option to view it in Japanese with subtitles, I might've changed my opinion. | |
at first, i was going to shout "XBOX," but from what i have gathered, the japanese hate the xbox, so it could actually go either way... | |
To be honest, is it not kind of their fault for not keeping up and finding a way to monetise their shows outside of their own country? They'll make some off maybe a dvd sale or two a year down the line or some kinds of anime figures but more could have been done. It takes a translator about 2 days to download, sub and re-encode/upload an episode of an anime and with netflix style subscriptions becoming popular they're missing a lot of money. | |
But the service isn't IN Japan, so surely good business sense would be to put the service on whatever has the larger market share? ... and that's the 360, isn't it? I don't actually know... | |
to throw the whole console community off guard, why not put it on the Wii(U) | |
You say that like it will stop people from pirating anime. It won't. | |
You so funneh DJ! OT: So hows that fan made Toonami channel going? I live in the UK so i'll just keep surfing the internet in vein for now... | |
I unno Ps3 has all the same stuff as Xbox360 as far as 'tv' goes. Also you can get NHL season pass, there's TV shows for download. | |
I agree. Unfortunately, those days are behind us. It wouldn't surprise me if more and more subscription-based services start including ads where they didn't before. | |
I was excited, then I read Viz. It has been quite some time since I really watched one of their shows. | |
Its a shame this is paid for rather than ad driven or something, if it was free they could get anime to a wider audience in the west which would be awesome. Its a shame its not coming to the UK. People who are inherently against dubs are kind of annoying, why right off everything because some is bad? Plus I doubt many people are as good at assessing foreign language voice acting since they dont hear it spoke day to day so wont recognise poor speech, just my opinion, its so grating to see people be so damn snooty. | |
I'll consider giving it a shot if there's a Japanese/subbed option because some animes just sound better that way and vice versa, otherwise Netflix has enough dubbed only anime. | |
I think I'll stick with fansubs online, they've never let me down in the past. A bit off topic though the article mentioned it, I saw the first Berserk movie recently and it left me with kind of a bad taste in my mouth. All the hand-drawn scenes were beautiful and the writing was okay (they somehow managed to fall short of the manga's eloquence) but the crappy PS2 CGI robbed the fight scenes of interest, tension, or anything that a fight scene should convey. And they shied away from the brutality, which undermines the theme of having to do horrible things for the sake of one's dream. | |
I have a 360,ps3 and wii...so I'm covered! | |
Meh...sounds like a good deal but I'm not interested in any of those anime. Maybe InuYasha, and that's just a faint curiosity. | |
Because so little of it is good. Better to expect dirge and receive bacon, than have your wide-eyed optimism beaten around the ears by terrible voices. Example: English-language dub of Panty and Stocking. Stocking's voice is RUINED. | |
Uncut Anime Coming to a Major Game Console
Anime distributor, Viz, is launching a 24-Hour Anime TV service for an undisclosed major console.
This fall, Viz will be launching a 24-hour anime service called "Neon Alley" on one of the major game consoles. A US$6.99 per month subscription to the service - assuming you live in Canada or the US - will net you uncut, dubbed and HD (where available) anime shows and movies, as well as original content in the form of news and behind-the-scenes footage.
The service will play host to the English dub premieres of Tiger & Bunny, Inuyasha: The Final Act, Zetman, Lagrange - The Flower of Rin-ne and new episodes of endless, shonen punch-festival, Naruto Shippūden. It will also air movies, including Berserk: The Golden Age Arc trilogy.
Brian Ige, Viz's Media Vice President of Animation, described the service as somewhat akin to Hulu Plus - IE: it'll still have ads despite being a subscription service. It'll work like a traditional channel, rather than an on-demand service.
Anime distribution companies have been finding it difficult to monetize the content they license, despite an eruption of western interest in the medium over the past two decades. Exceptionally high product costs coupled with slow releases, have given rise to a massive, fan-driven translation community - a community anime distributors are now having to compete against.
Hopefully this new service, alongside streaming services such as Crunchyroll, will provide a happy medium for anime fans who don't want to pirate shows or pay $40 per DVD.
Source: Anime News Network
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