Comment on Witch on the Holy Night Game Gets Release on Steam on December 14
Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space 1 year agobeing able to read a 20 year old VN (on linux natively) is something that Type Moon would probably never concern themselves about.
That’s definitely true. I don’t know of a Japanese company that has released a visual novel with a native GNU/Linux binary.
Type Moon has also been very lax when it comes to derivative works (I probably don’t need to mention that with all the fate spin-offs and doujins floating around).
I’m aware of how uh, interesting, copyright law is in Japan, but I don’t think I’ve seen anyone get raked over the coals for a doujin. Is that something that actually happens? And, aren’t the Fate spin-offs authorized by TYPE-MOON?
Mahoyo is the indirect prequel to that (get used to not having any direct sequels in the nasuverse)
Sounds like it’s just up my alley, then! I’m excited! I’ve been wanting to read Fate for a long time, too. I’ve seen the DEEN anime, UBW series and movie, but I haven’t touched Heaven’s Feel. I want my first experience to be with the visual novel. I think I mentioned I’m a fan of slice of life and not much of a fan of action, but a blend of the two is a nice cocktail. I like the “dramedy” genre for similar reasons; I can’t watch a pure comedy for too long but drama makes it feel grounded. BoJack Horseman comes to mind.
Anyway, it sounds like a good time. Animations are a plus too, because most VNs don’t have that kind of budget :)
although I have a couple youtube channels that cover anime news really well
I have a confession to make: I’m not too interested in keeping up with the latest anime. I don’t even have a Crunchyroll subscription. The only anime I watch tend to be 10-20 years old, though I was thinking of watching Kimagure Orange Road the other day…
That said, I am interested in VN news. Particularly localizations, because as I said earlier, they’re easier to get my hands on when I want the Japanese script. Thanks for providing invidious links though!
but every time I start my free time gets eaten up by something else and I end up having to put it off.
Feels like my life this year. Unfortunately, certain things have had to take a much higher priority, but about half of it was just me getting distracted by something else, lol. You don’t need to spend hours learning Japanese every day, though. Half an hour is good enough to form a habit and get acclimated. But I’m sure you don’t need me to tell you that, since this isn’t your first rodeo :)
if I would seriously start immersing myself I bet I could form a pretty decent understanding of Japanese in no time
I bet you would! Take this as my encouragement to do so when you have the time! I never had any formal classes on Japanese, don’t know any Japanese people, and only really interacted with Japanese media, so I’m self-taught, you could say. I only knew English beforehand. It took a while to wrap my head around some fundamental stuff, but it feels natural now. It’d probably be easier for you, haha.
Mushoku Tensei
I have not. The kind of web novels I was interested in were the villainess kind. You know, Destruction Flag Otome (or Bakarina, whatever), Reika-sama, Evil God Average, Eliza, stuff like that. I prefer female protagonists (and somehow Saga of Tanya the Evil counts as that). I liked Ascendance of a Bookworm and really liked So I’m a Spider, So What? but have only seen the anime adaptations in any great detail at the moment. I’ve transitioned to reading the light novel adaptations of the web novels, mostly, but because Syosetu novels are free, I’ve downloaded a fair few. Mushoku Tensei was one of the few stories with a male protagonist I was interested in reading at some point.
I just remembered that the story that got me into reading was actually HakoMari. I think I read all 7 volumes in 3 days… I have no idea how I managed that and I have never read that fast again, haha!
Scraft161@iusearchlinux.fyi 1 year ago
Mahoyo and Tsukihime Remake (from what I’ve seen) have gone above and beyond in their presentation and it is wild to see how far Type Moon has gone to make this happen, KiriKiri is an insanely powerful VN engine with very little english documentation and they’re not even using half of what it could do. compared to what these two do Fate is almost primitive; but that’s also because of how much time and effort poured into those two.
me neither, where I live all anime streaming services we have suck; no exception, either I dish out insane amounts of cash every months and fiddle with a VPN provider that I can trust and is fast enough to handle streaming (so far I’ve only found Mullvad to fit this) to get access to the thing I want to watch; usually in HD (the 720p kind; 1080p is marketed as UHD and often streaming services don’t offer that unless you change you user agent to a windows one because DRM is bullshit); or I say fuck it and become a 21st century sailor and use the money I save from that to buy stuff like DVD/Blu-ray releases or figures of which a larger portion of the money would make it to the people making the show possible and not into lining the pockets of the rich so it’s a win-win for everybody not wealthy enough to get government funded tax deductions.
I’ve used an app called FreeTube for a good while alongside NewPipe, both are privacy respecting and have been working better for me than the default youtube website/app, they also both use invidious which I consider a requirement for being able to actually watch youtube content nowadays.
I loved the story to death and still do; it uses a lot of standard isekai tropes (OP portagonist, magic, medieval european style setting, …), but these are merely set dressing, it’s world is vast and expansive, characters feel like people and not just cardboard cutouts, when characters aren’t on screen they’re usually doing something else that could even forward the plot, … Rudeus (the protagonist) also doesn’t immediately change when he lays eyes on this other world; he was a shut-in NEET in his previous life and try as he may it’s hard to break the habits and trauma that bound him to his room and he takes this second chance at life trying to live life to the fullest and it’s one of the best redemption arcs I’ve seen in fiction so far (although I have yet to read Berserk so that could change). there still is a certain level of wish fullfilment, fanserive, and the like (it is an isekai after all); but I never found it too distracting. I loved it’s 7th LN volume, this was added with the LN to bridge the events between the end of volume 6 and the beginning of the school arc (LN volume 8), technically it’s filler; but it a really well put together part of the story and gives us a good view into Rudeus’ state of mind and has lot lot of context to emphasize the characters, context that the anime promptly cut lessening the impact of this whole arc significantly.
I have no other words than “that’s insane”, even for Mushoku Tensei I didn’t get close to that (I averaged a little over one volume a week) and that was with me being addicted to it’s story (I even had to jump to a translation on the WN later on because the english light novels weren’t caught up and I needed to know more.
Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space 1 year ago
Yeah, I’m happy ONScripter exists, although I haven’t gotten it to work perfectly for a VN yet. TRianThology doesn’t work in Wine, actually displays in ONScripter natively but flashes green twice a second due to some image decoding issue, and works properly when running the game through a Windows ONScripter binary over Wine. Riddle me that one, lmao. I installed the patched AUR version, for what it’s worth.
Still need to get around to playing TRianThology properly…
I remember someone saying something similar about mpv. I thought ONScripter was dead when I visited the page when I was writing pages for the wiki. Good to know it’s still alive. Hell, it outlived NScripter!
I get the impression most visual novels are not going to make it mainstream, which is why the presentation is usually budget-constrained. And the length, of course. It makes me wonder if TYPE MOON is going to make their money back on the remakes—I hope they do! It means more pretty animations. I guess if anyone can do it, it’s them, lol.
I remember reading Muv-Luv Alternative, and while the animations were pretty primitive, they did a good job of conveying the action. Sometimes you don’t need much, but I always love to see visual novels go above and beyond. Age are probably doing pretty well for themselves too…
It’s not too bad over here. Obviously, if you’re not American, you’re going to miss out on a lot of series, but aside from the Monogatari Series, I don’t run across series I can’t access in my region that often. Then again, I watch anime from 1980-2010 mostly. HiDive is nice, though.
I refuse to use services that require me to install a DRM module in my browser like Netflix. Fuck Amazon too, but for different and more personal reasons.
I’ve bought some anime, but being a GNU/Linux user, that means I either need to check the decrypted AACS keys carefully before purchase, or I need to avoid buying Blu-Ray editions. I wonder if MakeMKV is more reliable. It seems silly to spend any significant amount of money on DVDs that tap out at 480p when there are 720p/1080p editions that treat me like a criminal because I don’t have an authorized software Blu-Ray player in addition to an actual Blu-Ray player. From memory, the 1080p editions of some anime are actually scaled up by the studio anyway. And usually poorly.
I remember reading about that when I was learning about encoding…
So, yes, I am kind of bitter about the choices I’ve been left to make. I spend more money on manga and visual novels these days. At least there are actually a significant number of visual novels not encumbered by DRM…can’t say the same for most Blu-Ray editions of anime. Region codes, disk encryption…this is crazy stuff. I’m just glad they haven’t figured out a way to encumber physical books with DRM yet.
That being said, I’m happy to purchase older anime because the highest quality you can get a lot of them is on DVD, so I don’t feel like I’m missing out on anything :)
Thanks for recommending it. I installed the Flatpak. It seems more reliable than going to an Invidious instance in my browser. It’s not like I watch YouTube much, but I guess it ought to be comfortable when I do.
Well, you’ve done a good job selling it to me! I don’t know too much about it, but that’s enough to pique my interest. A lot of isekai with male protagonists are very transparent wish fulfillment fantasies or grindfests. And that’s fine, but I find it so boring! Isekai series with female protagonists tend to be more fun. Mushoku Tensei sounds like it has a lot of the stuff I enjoy in those isekai stories, and I can put up with fanservice for the sake of that. I’ve got a loooong plan-to-read list, but I will eventually read it!
I think I spent about 14 hours a day reading it and lost a fair bit of sleep in the process. Combine the novelty of reading with a great story, and I just couldn’t get enough. There is no way in hell I could spend anywhere near that amount of time reading a story today, even if I lost sleep for it. That being said, HakoMari volumes are only about 200 pages long.
Meanwhile, Worm took me three weeks and I was not the same afterward.
Scraft161@iusearchlinux.fyi 1 year ago
DRM was a mistake enabled by corporate greed and our current copyright laws; the best we can do is show that we’re not biting anything that smells of these practices which is hard when exclusive licensing only provides one legal option with the alternative being piracy. That said; while it is definitely against the law (in most countries) the way I’m doing it now provides more money to the anime industry by spending less so the people in charge of making the thing I like get a larger share while the rich tax evading middle man CEO of [insert streaming service here] isn’t gaining anything from just adding DRM. It’s sad to see that this can only be done by resorting to these methods; but I think we both know who copyright law really benefits.
I haven’t gotten into the whole Blu-Ray shenanigans yet (part because getting anything anime here is a fucking nightmare in the first place and DVD/Blu-Ray are far down on the list of anime things I’d buy) I also don’t have anything that could read Blu-Ray ATM (my laptop does read CD/DVD perfectly fine though) so it’ll be a good bit before I even dare bother.
Depends from studio to studio, nowadays 1080p generally looks “fine” for most anime; but for older projects where SD DVD or VHS (/Betamax) was the best quality option or a lot of stuff early in the HD era it’s always a gamble to see if it turned out ok-ish.
If books were invented in the last 30 years they probably would have; a big part of the reason they haven’t bothered is because they’d have to do it extremely slowly as to not let the frog jump out of the boiling pot. New technology usually comes with less consumer control compared to it’s predecessor, e-books can have DRM (although if you know where to buy you can get them without DRM or a DRM scheme calibre can easily remove), it’s sad to see things moving in this direction; but where there’s money you’ll find corporations digging it up no matter how dirty it may be.
Make sure to set it to use an invidious instance that works well for you, freetube also has SponsorBlock built-in which you can enable in the settings, there’s also much more there for you to tweak.
There are no flat characters in Mushoku Tensei (aside from chest size obviously) even the mandatory overly sexualized girl of the group has an actual reason for being that way. On the surface it definitely sounds like the usual isekai; but it doesn’t just copy the formula for the sake of copying the formula, it takes care of every detail in order to build something that stands on it’s own.
Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space 1 year ago
Section 1201 of the DMCA is an incredibly shameful piece of legislation to have made it to law. Ridiculous copyright terms apparently weren’t enough for Disney and co.
Yes, unfortunately, that’s all we can do. I doubt it will convince any of these companies to abandon these practices, but I refuse to support them monetarily. I’m reminded of the Veronica Mars Movie kickstarter campaign, where fans happily pledged over $5 Million dollars to see it come to fruition. Warner Bros. rewarded their fans for their generosity and support by encumbering the film with DRM so GNU/Linux fans who funded the film couldn’t watch the film: techdirt.com/…/warner-bros-turns-kickstarter-succ…
This is greed, plain and simple. They already brought in 5.7 Million dollars of revenue before the film was made. Sure, that money was spent on making the film, but at the very least, they knew they would braek even. Not many studios have that kind of guarantee. They brought in another 3.5 Million in the Box Office, making a profit. It’s very possible that without fans funding the film, Warner Bros would have lost money.
DRM did nothing to increase profits.
(Yes, I’m a Veronica Mars fan)
Thanks to the discussion we had, I spent yesterday going through my Blu-Ray collection. MakeMKV is fantastic and I highly recommend it if you ever buy a show on Blu-Ray. Hell, even DVD. I don’t know how well it keeps up with constantly changing Blu-Ray encryption schemes, but it seems to be much better than any of the standard methods. Plus, it has a nice GUI.
Ah, that makes sense. I don’t have a VHS or Betamax player, haha. Or a Laserdisc player. I’ll have to settle for the DVD conversion when I buy one of those older shows.
That’s an interesting thought. I can’t say I disagree with it at all. I own Harmony on Blu-Ray and started watching it again for the first time since 2015 (fantastic film btw), and it really does feel that way. The more advanced technology gets, the less the general public can do with it. It’s just…strange, when you think about it. The one exception has been the web, which was kind of an accident. Had Microsoft created it instead of some wide-eyed engineer at CERN, it definitely wouldn’t have ended up being the open platform it is today. And even though it is very open compared to a lot of other areas, there’s a trend toward certain companies trying to lock it down.
On the subject of locking down physical books, TorrentFreak has a super interesting article on the history of libraries and how publishers really didn’t like them: torrentfreak.com/you-cant-defend-public-libraries…
I’ll have to tweak it sometime, thank you! For the moment, the default invidious instance has been working great. A lot better than the invidious instance I use in my browser.
That’s my favorite kind of story, actually. It’s the same reason I really like the Monogatari Series (even though I despised it when I watched it originally; the novels grew on me).