Forum - View topicNEWS: Japanese Groups: Blu-ray to Overtake DVD in 2013
Goto page Previous 1, 2, 3, 4 Next Note: this is the discussion thread for this article |
Author | Message | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mangamuscle
Posts: 2658 Location: Mexico |
|
|||||
IMO blu-ray penetration is "on schedule", way ahead of DVD-audio (or Super Audio CD) that never become a successful successor of the inferior Audio CD. People seem to forget it took several years for the videotape to become ubiquitous in the home market, and then it also took the DVD several years to substitute VHS (even tough the DVD had the advantage of lacking format wars like beta vs. VHS or blu-ray vs HD-DVD).
I do not trust the "cloud", i prefer to have my discs where no EMP or hacker attack can wipe my whole collection in a blink.
Resistance is futile, thou shall be assimilated. Last edited by mangamuscle on Sun Feb 05, 2012 2:21 pm; edited 1 time in total |
||||||
Mirri
Posts: 313 |
|
|||||
I buy BluRay because DVDs have macroblocking and aliasing artifacts, as well as issues with high motion.
The resolution is not nearly as important to me as the lack of macroblocking and the issues with aliasing and high motion. Though there can be aliasing and some artifacts as a result of upscaling, they're generally not as bad as just plain bad encodes. Though, if the BluRay is a bad upscale job then I'll just buy the DVD. Even with the visual issues. P.S. Macroblocking makes me want to scream at the top of my lungs loud enough for my TV to shatter. |
||||||
bhl88
Posts: 255 |
|
|||||
I fell before the Blu-Ray trend.... 99% of my collection is Blu-Ray (including the anime).
|
||||||
luffypirate
Posts: 3187 |
|
|||||
This is great. I'd say about 95% of my import collection is Blu-ray. Sharing the same region is quite awesome. This year marks the first in certain shows only receiving the BD treatment.
|
||||||
RyanSaotome
Posts: 4210 Location: Towson, Maryland |
|
|||||
So basically, shows you don't like should get bad treatment with their releases? Thats mature. These are the shows that sell better (many of the more "Deep" stuff don't make profit these days). So if any of these shows should get streaming only, its the stuff thats won't sell physical discs. Like here are the Fall anime sales: *1, 41,369 Persona 4 The Animation *2, 22,673 Kyoukai Senjou no Horizon *3, 19,613 Working'!! *4, 11,984 Boku wa Tomodachi ga Sukunai *5, 10,042 Guilty Crown *6, *4,524 Sekaiichi Hatsukoi 2 *7, *4,077 Tamayura: Hitotose (Blu-ray data only, DVD *,920 ~1,131) *8, *3,885 gdgd Fairies *9, *3,421 Maji de Watashi ni Koi Shinasai! 10, *3,379 Shinryaku!? Ika Musume 12, *3,199 Maken-Ki! (Blu-ray data only, DVD *,920 ~1,131) 13, *3,026 Last Exile: Ginyoku no Fam 14, *2,828 Shakugan no Shana III (Blu-ray data only, DVD 1,131~1,273) 15, *2,336 Mirai Nikki 16, *2,333 Chihayafuru (vol.2) 17, *2,101 Ben-To 18, *2,038 C³ 19, *1,853 Kimi to Boku. 20, **,954 Morita-san wa Mukuchi 2 out of the rankings Mashiroiro Symphony: The Color of Lovers Hunter x Hunter UN-GO Phi Brain: Kami no Puzzle Are you gonna tell me that something like Chihayafuru or Un-Go deserves a physical release more than Maken-ki or MajiKoi? These "dime a dozen" anime is what keeps the industry alive, since they're cheap to make and sell enough to get profit. |
||||||
dewlwieldthedarpachief
Posts: 751 Location: Canada |
|
|||||
@RyanSaotome:
It's one thing for me to speculate about the merits of streaming vs. disc for various bits of content and make a dream speech about anime "graduating" from highschool, but making sense of sales numbers is way above my pay grade! If you can do that, by all means, break out the powerpoint and change minds. Just remember, as an anime fan I'm not about to compensate you... |
||||||
Mesonoxian Eve
Posts: 1858 |
|
|||||
Inaccurate. Consumers aren't paying the physical price.
I can't believe people are still clinging to a physical product in a digital distribution era. It's holding everyone back. |
||||||
Polycell
Posts: 4623 |
|
|||||
|
||||||
dewlwieldthedarpachief
Posts: 751 Location: Canada |
|
|||||
@Polycell:
Good to know. I was thinking more along the lines of predicting customer purchasing habits. Is it enough to just say "oh this sells, make more", or do publishers have a need to understand their customers more thoroughly? I would think ultimately the latter is important, because nothing is popular forever and one needs to reel as many people in as possible to move more units, etc. |
||||||
RyanSaotome
Posts: 4210 Location: Towson, Maryland |
|
|||||
They just decided it makes more money to focus on the buying market. With how anime sells for 80 dollars per 2 episodes, only the most hardcore fans (the otaku) are willing to buy it. Not to slight the non otaku fans, but they just aren't as into anime and its culture to pay those prices (as is often seen here with how much people complain about paying the Japanese prices for anime like Fate/Zero). The lesser fans will still watch the anime on TV, but with the late night anime, its essentially a commercial. You pay for the timeslots, so it doesn't matter how many people watch it if they aren't buying the DVD/BDs. For example, Kaiji was one of the best rated late night anime both times it aired... yet neither anime sold more than 500 copies a volume. Yet something cheap like A-Channel had bad ratings, but sold 6k copies since its target audience buys anime. |
||||||
mangamuscle
Posts: 2658 Location: Mexico |
|
|||||
That is merely wishful thinking. Digital distribution is not the next phase in the evolution of physical media, that line of thought is akin to thinking the video streaming will substitute broadcast TV (which continues to enjoy a good bill of health). Last edited by mangamuscle on Sun Feb 05, 2012 2:55 pm; edited 1 time in total |
||||||
RyanSaotome
Posts: 4210 Location: Towson, Maryland |
|
|||||
And when it comes down to it, nobody benefits from digital distribution outside of the companies themselves, since they get to charge just as much without having to deal with production. The customers get shafted. I know personally I would never pay for a product I don't physically own. Its no different from piracy if all they give me is a file on my PC. |
||||||
mangamuscle
Posts: 2658 Location: Mexico |
|
|||||
Indeed! Even when they have to deal with production costs, the whole "manufacture on demand" paradigm shafts the consumer since the price never goes down, even from a used copy! |
||||||
P€|\||§_|\/|ast@
Posts: 3498 Location: IN your nightmares |
|
|||||
|
||||||
RyanSaotome
Posts: 4210 Location: Towson, Maryland |
|
|||||
Would you eat nothing but instant ramen and sacrifice going out just to be able to afford the new great anime? If not, then you can't argue you care about anime as much as the biggest otaku out there. They live and breath anime, and have their entire rooms dedicated to their hobby. Spending money and time is one of the most significant ways to tell how much someone is into a hobby. I'm not going to try to say I'm a bigger NBA fan then someone else who watches every single game at the same time using a league pass. I only watch a couple games a week, so I'm not at that same kind of fandom. |
||||||
All times are GMT - 5 Hours |
||
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group