![]() ![]() You're not financially supporting your favorite series, you're not supporting the US anime industry, and you're just helping to eat away at the foundations of the strong anime community that has been supporting the entire US anime industry since the start." While what they offer isn't really too bad, and probably seems pretty spiffy to the Youtube Newbies who still stream anime and have just discovered CR, money paid to them pretty much stops there. This makes it tougher for the core licensing companies, like Funimation, etc., to survive and thrive. ![]() CR has been poaching series by offering to be "cheap and easy" licensing and profit, basically the Chinese Outsourcing of licensing companies. The translations on various shows have had blatant errors, poor editing, and are generally shoddy compared to the quality of most of the top fansub groups.Ĩ. DVDs have been the traditional route of non-Japanese fans financially supporting anime they enjoy, so this also interferes with that.ħ. They don't publish DVDs, so anything they license is dead in the water in terms of anime collections. still trying to rip people off to make money off anime that would have been shared freely otherwiseĦ. So not only was it morally offensive, they didn't even have the decency to do a good job of it." CR was a ripoff, streaming crappy quality video as they committed the above offenses. CR made money from stealing shows, which is anathema to everything the anime community follows.ģ. CR not only made money off stealing shows, they stole fansubs and made money off them, claiming the stolen fansubs as their own without even bothering to strip the subber tags. The DVDRip community is separate from the fansubbers, and even then the rippers usually encourage financially supporting series you like.Ģ. Most of the anime community follows fansubs of unlicensed series, where a free translation service is provided for sharing a series among fellow fans. They were actual thieves, earning profit from streaming anime illegally. I'll quote someone who said it better than me: Those conniving thieves deserve every ounce of justice they can get, as people who have been part of the anime community for a very long time know. Sun 3rd Apr not? Crunchyroll did it for a long time.It comes with short advertising spots but works The 24-26episodes will adapt the games up to "Justice for All". Crunchyroll allows free watching in the lower resolution 7 days after release. (they don't always have the publication rights for every country)īe sure to understand that you would not lose anything by refusing to pay. But you should first check the availability of the anime series you are interested in before paying. The ending was a lot better than the The idea of providers like Crunchyroll is to bring you a translated episode a few hours/days after it was shown on its japanese TV channel. I know the games use still artworks and I never really found the pictures style great but the anime doesn't look good. On the other hand, all the characters looked "stuffed" when they were moving while their faces were far from pretty. I know there will be a sixth game soon and this series is like a promotion campaign to bring new peoples to the franchise by showing them the old scenari but it is a shame how it will prevent any desire to buy the actual old game (released on several platforms and pretty cheap on the 3DS e-shop even without the repeated sales). It was pleasant to see all those old GBA games elements reused for the anime, from some sound or music to panels and direction choices. From now on, I'll simply wait to watch it free on Crunchy and stop once reach the case I was on in the game (before I loose the save). ![]() I kind of cheated and watched the first episode already. The story in Ace Attorney games is really good and I've got a feeling that it won't translate quite as well in anime format. The game is about finding contradictions (at least the trials) and some of the fun is gone when you know the answers beforehand. If the first episode is anything to go by, you'll get most of the answers to the trials by watching the anime. Does anyone know if they'll move onto other parts of the trilogy once they're done with I would personally play the games first since so far the anime seems to be based on the cases in the games. That pretty much confirms that the later cases are divided into multiple episodes and I'd guess it's one in game day an episode. ![]() They teased the second episode at the end and it said "Next time: Turnabout Sisters - 1st Trial". There aren't really great cliffhangers where to leave it and it's better for people new to Ace Attorney to have full experience on the first episode. I'd guess only the tutorial is in one episode since they pretty much had to fit in one episode. ![]()
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