Wednesday, November 28, 2007

A lil' bit of me just died.......

Ya know, I was all excited and everything, just waiting and drooling on getting my grubby lil’ hands on my very first 1/48 VF-1. I managed to hold off my excitement, ya know just to keep it in the box and look at it....

Well, last night, it got the better of me and I open my 1S Roy, somehow..... I was expecting more ya know? I felt kinda let down by how plain it look. ( guess it's decal time!)

Took it out of the plastic tray to look it over, seems sturdy enough at first. Flipped open the instructions on how to transform the Valk, won't say the instructions are the best in the world, but it's simple enough to follow. (Good lord, how on earth did I play with the 1/55 Bandai ones when I was only 5 or 6??)

First off, in Fighter mode, the landing gear bay doors are wayyy too tight, just opening the doors gave me a heart attack, and I think the joint on the right rear side is off, the door does not open straight, kinda off center like (heart ache)

The front landing gear is too tight, (talk about a squeeze just to get the wheel out and in place!!)

Second thing, I think Yamato still has some QC issues, the left wing joint doesn't seem to sit very tightly, and it looks almost like the joint for the wing is warped, I checked the screw that was holding it in place, lo and behold, it wasn't screwed on straight, so it's not sitting flush in the joint. That I think is wat's causing the wing joint to be floppy, just pointing the Fighter nose down, the left wing will swing out on it's own, no issues with the right side.

On to Gerwalk, transforming was a heart stopping affair, didn't know how much force to use so took my time. Everything seemed well until I hit the "foot" part. Again the left "foot" doesn't extend out straight, off center to the right some. Might be the groove that guides it out is off or not holding the extension right. Right "foot" is ok.

On to the arms, (Damn! I got floppy shoulders!) can't even hold the Gunpod extended, tends to flop. (Sigh)

Left side again!!!! The hand on the left side is loose, cannot hold the Gunpod at all, Right side is a-OK. (I see a trend here, the left side ain't "right" after all) *ok so it's corny, I'm heart broken already, so humor me*

Looks ok so far in Gerwalk, standing has a bit of an issue, tends to wanna crash, nose first. Maybe my legs weren't angled right.

Battroid mode seems the most stable, ( well considering that I have 2 1S "Roy", I might just keep thing one in Battroid mode) But again, with floppy shoulders and hands, not much action posing I can do here.

I'm sorry guys for ranting, (and not posting pictures, was kinda dissapointed so I transformed it back into Fighter to keep it back in the box.) It's just that, after so long, I think my expectations got the better of me, ya know? It just didn't seem to live up to what I had thought it might be. It's a cool toy, yes and I do like it, (flaws and all) but damn, This stuff's not cheap and I still got floppy parts and all, sigh......

I would most likely now, just get the ones that make sense to me, mainly the cast of SDF:Macross, just so I'll have this little bit of my childhood to carry along with me, where ever I might be.

But, I don't think I'll get getting the rest of the Macross Valks from Zero or Plus or F, just doesn't seem that I'm getting for what I'm paying for.

I know some of you disagree, (actually, I KNOW some of you will) but this is just how I feel, I'm a little happy, yet a little sad. I'm glad I have it, don't get me wrong, just wished it wasn't wonky with so many issues.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

2008 is gonna be an expensive year.....

Here's an update on some products that are due to be released in 2008. I'll break em down by company ( seems easier that way) First up, Japanese Anime Toys

Kaiyodo's Revoltech line

Due in stores Jan 08


Patlabor Movie Version ( which I honestly can't tell the diff between the Tv version.)


Tetsujin (aka Gigantor)

I have to say, I love the Revoltech line, I really think that for under 30buck
s, toys with such great articulation should not be missed. Truly I say, ya don't know what your missing until you've picked one up and started posing em'!


Next up is Cm's Corp's Mecha Action Series

Due in stores in Jan as well, Retailing at 6'825 yen

Not too bad I suppose, though this isn't really a chokin type, no die-cast at all.

Mospeada Ride Armour
(Megahouse/Toynami/Cm's Corp)

Now here's something that I'm really really interested in. For all you oldies/kiddies out there, I'm sure ya'll remember Mospeada , back in the day when watching Japanese Anime meant watching cartoons on the chinese chanel, which strange "dubious" dubs.

Here's a few comparison shots of the various ride armours that will be avail in 2008.


credits to eriku from macross world for the pics


The Megahouse version seems the nicer's to me followed by the Toynami ones, but we all know how crappy the QC of Toynami is.... Cm's Corp... dunno what to say, looks very very retro.
But still, considering the fact that Mospeada toys are so rare, most of us have been waiting years to own some, I'll be getting them all I suppose.

The Megahouse versions are due in Feb, pre-ordering has started.
The Cm's Corp versions are due in late Dec 07 (suprise suprise) Pre-order available at HLJ
The Toynami versions, no firm news of the release as yet.


Macross Variable Fighters By Yamato

I've gotta say first, I'm a Macross nut, I'll admit to that, but the newer Macross toys from the Mac Plus and Mac Zero Anime really really don't appeal to me. I'm lucky that way I guess. So just a quick round up of what is to be expected in 2008.

Due in stores in Feb, 1/60 scale Macross Zero Sv-51A (Limited) Cannon Fodder Color

In March, 1/60 scale Macross Plus YF-21 (inclusive of Fast Packs and Display stand)

Planned for April, 1/60 Macross Plus VF-11B ( all hush hush for now)

Gashapon styled 1/200 Macross Variable Fighters Collection 12 Types (9 common + 3 special)


So there you have it, some toys for 2008, seems little huh? Better start preparing you wallet friends. (Mind you, I've not even started on the western toys yet)

Just something I came across

My usual surfing of forums this morning has turned up a gem of an article (see the following)

Editorial: An Open Letter to the Industry
by Justin Sevakis, Nov 25 2007



The following editorial is solely the opinion of its writer and does not necessarily reflect the views of Anime News Network or its affiliates.

These are good times to be an anime fan. DVD's have never been cheaper. If you're not into buying DVD's or don't have the money, you can download DVD-quality copies over the internet for free and never have to worry about anything bad ever happening to you, ever.

Consequently, these are downright terrible times for anybody in the anime industry. DVD sales are way down, profits are even lower, and a good number of companies are losing money hand-over-fist. Even in Japan, many productions aren't breaking even. People in both the US and Japan are feeling like it's the apocalypse.

The decline of the anime industry and the influence of fansubs on said decline is probably the most talked-about issue in the scene today. The pros have discussed it worriedly amongst themselves for years, but only recently are they speaking out about its damaging effects. Every time they do, and we post about it here on ANN, there's a firestorm of debate about exactly how bad fans should feel about downloading. Occasionally, industry people will pop in to argue for more guilt.

I understand the panic going on. I've seen the numbers myself. They're terrifying. It's not uncommon now for a DVD to not even make back the cost of the dubbing, let alone the license fee. When only a few years ago it was commonplace for shows to get licensed for $70,000 or more per episode, today a show can be licensed for less than half of that. And they're still not profitable.

Clearly, the business model is failing. People realize this, but nobody's actually doing anything about it. Rather than take decisive action, the industry keeps trying the same things it's been doing for years, and when that inevitably doesn't work, the fans who download are blamed. Which makes sense. After all, they're getting the product but not paying for it. Most people would call that stealing.

Now, if this was something new, perhaps I'd have a little more sympathy when the rights holders cry victim. However, the fansub scene is approaching voting age at this point, and digitally transmitted fansubs started circulating about a decade ago. Every year they've gotten more and more widespread (with the historic popularity of Naruto pushing them into complete prominence). And to date, those rights holders have done very little to stop them. There is now an entire generation of anime fans who have never been forced to pay a single dime to get their anime fix.

I do not blame the fans who download with impunity and don't buy a thing. Their attitudes, while damaging, are simply a reflection of the value of anime, which these days, is about $0.00.

That's right. Anime that has been fansubbed is effectively worthless. It's being given away for free. In terms of supply and demand, there is an infinite supply, and therefore the product is worthless regardless of how many people want it – it's like trying to sell buckets of sea water to people on a beach. The only people who would pay for it are either older fans who are attached to the old ways of consuming media, or worse, are doing so out of charity.

That is the state of this industry. And the companies who depend on anime for their livelihood let this happen.



HOW DID WE GET HERE?


When I was a fansubber back in the VHS days, fansubbers felt lucky if more than a few hundred people saw their fansubs. Copies degraded with every generation, tapes wore out (and never looked great to begin with), and the whole thing was very ephemeral. You had to have connections to get fansubs, or be one of the few that knew how to use the internet to make contact with a distributor. Even if you already had a fansubbed anime when it was licensed, the legal copies were usually far superior in quality.

Digital fansubbing changed everything. Suddenly, an infinite number of very high quality copies could be made. Advances in data compression, computer horsepower and broadband connectivity over the years means that now even the least motivated fan can easily find, in English, whatever new is coming out in Japan merely days after it airs on TV.

The internet, that strange beast that now shapes our modern world, effectively takes distribution out of the hands of the rights holder and puts the consumer in charge. Now, even the smallest release – an airing on a satellite TV channel in a small island country, for example – can be put on the internet and distributed to millions of people, should somebody be motivated enough to upload it. Anime fans, being younger and more technically savvy than most demographics, quickly adopt these new methods. And since the internet is global, so is the fansub market.

That few hundred people from the early days has now become hundreds of thousands of people worldwide. However, fansubs are not like music in that anybody can rip a CD and upload it; they take quite a bit of work (and usually a small group of people) to produce. As those fansub groups have to then upload to everybody else, they should make for an easy legal target.

The domestic distributors, to their credit, have made limited attempts to get shows they've licensed taken offline, but their legal arsenal is limited to a Cease and Desist letter. Many of the more self-serving groups have discovered that these can safely be ignored, and little else will ever happen. Worse, by the time a domestic distributor licenses a show the fansub is likely to have been circulating for months. The damage is already done. With few exceptions, the Japanese side of the industry has not even done this much.

Legal rights, such as copyright to an anime, must be defended if they're to be recognized. Anime has not been defended to any effective degree.

Arthur Smith, president of Gonzo Digital Holdings International, recently compared the downloading of fansubs to breaking into the Apple Store and stealing an iPhone the day before it's released. This is incorrect for several reasons. Debate on physical property versus digital copies aside, if one breaks into an Apple Store, an alarm goes off, the police come, and if you're caught you go to prison. There's also a window and a few locks you'd have to break, and you could injure yourself in the process.

If we're to adjust Smith's statement to be truly factual, downloading a fansub would be something more akin to Apple leaving their entire stock of iPhones on a busy street corner with no locks, no guards, and a big sign that says “iPhone”. If the Apple store manager came in the next day and saw that all of them were stolen, he would file a police report and the police would laugh at him. If he then REFILLED the entire stock, still did not buy any locks or hire any guards (but added a small sign that says “please don't take me”), a couple people might start to feel a little bad, but they're still going to come back for more, and probably bring some friends too. Eventually that Apple store would go out of business, and most people would agree that they deserved to.

The point is this: You can't guilt people into buying something they don't want. If you can't make them want it, you simply don't have a business.



GETTING OUT OF THE RUT



To effectively understand the problem, one must understand two things: why people make fansubs, and why people download fansubs.

People make fansubs for one reason: to share cool new shows they like. (There are other personal reasons, of course, such as improving their Japanese skills and braging rights.) People watch fansubs because the American releases take years to come out (if they come out at all). Once on DVD, they often have to be bought sight-unseen, which sometimes works for movies on DVD but is an unrealistic commitment for TV series. To younger fans, DVD's are also very expensive.

There is currently no legal way for any of these needs to be met. As the anime industry has not given these customers what they want, these freshly empowered consumers are taking it themselves. Therefore, even if massive, expensive lawsuits were filed against fansubbers, the problem would not stop. Stopping current fansubbers would create a market vacuum. Fans would just find another way (and, as Odex recently discovered, they'd be very angry as well).

Before legal action will be effective, fansubs must be replaced. THERE HAS TO BE A LEGAL, INEXPENSIVE WAY TO WATCH NEW ANIME IN ENGLISH. Not necessarily own, but at least watch.

ADV Films and Funimation know this and have both attempted to fill this void with television networks, streaming and download services. However, neither can offer a show newer than a year old.

There are myriad ways of supporting such a venture. A low subscription price. Advertising. But it has to exist, and it has to be easier to use than bittorrent. It has to show new anime DAYS after it airs in Japan. It has to be available to most of the world. It can't lock out Mac or Linux users. All of these are reasons people will use to justify continued piracy.

Only then, after there is no reason for a fansub to exist other than pure greed, can a few choice lawsuits against a few prominent fansubbers scare the rest of the scene into compliance.

DVD sales would also return to their proper place, as the collectable for fans who really liked the show and want to keep their own copy. However, as packaged media declines, media companies must stay light on their feet so they can quickly adjust to new technologies as they start becoming more commonplace.

This is merely step one of a long road to recovery. But it's not a step that can be avoided.



DRAGGING THEIR FEET


This is easier said than done. The Japanese entertainment industry is infamous for being a labyrinthine, Brazil-esque muddle of red tape. Only the very highest executives of the producing companies can cut through the red tape, and to date they have shown little intention of doing so.

I can't name specifics here, as I don't wish to betray my confidences, but so far I've been given two primary reasons for this seemingly obvious solution not being put into action already.

The first is fear of change. Simply, the older companies that made their bones in the publishing business are scared to death of the internet and the threats it makes to their existing business. The logical fallacy here is that the internet has already impacted their existing business, and by not taking advantage of new technology, there's no new revenue to compensate for the lost old revenue.

More than anything, the rights holders are terrified that by allowing internet distribution, they might cut into the domestic Japanese market, upon which the entire industry now depends. This would be a valid fear if it weren't for the fact that everybody in Japan can already download HD-quality raw files (illegally) if they want to. If the otaku are still buying DVD's, an English subtitled stream would not make a difference. And even if they did watch (and weren't blocked), wouldn't many of those viewers want to buy the DVD as well?

The other reason is that these companies seem to be under the mistaken impression that American anime fans and their buying practices are nearly identical to Japanese otaku. Of course, nothing could be further from the truth. American fans are younger, and are usually not nearly the “collectors” that their Japanese brethren are. Few will pay $55 for a half hour OAV, or even two TV episodes. But more importantly, they're not getting the TV airing that allows them to watch the show in the first place.

To make matters worse, as budgets have fallen the producers have compensated by making more shows that appeal to very specific niche audiences. (Moe, anyone?) While these shows will never be big, they're a short-term solution to keeping the all important Japanese otaku market paying the bills. Their audience in the States, while vocal, is even smaller.



LAST CHANCE


No matter how many appeals the industry makes to fandom, nobody is going to stop downloading. If something is free and available, people are going to take it. That's a fact of life, and no amount of guilt and blame will change that.

The industry is now at a crossroads, where the effects of all this is finally causing significant financial problems before new anime even gets made. The jobs of many talented artists and the countless other people that make up the Japanese animation industry are on the line. The current system is broken beyond repair, and to make money again, the entire way things work needs to be rethought from the ground up.

And those in charge can do it now, or watch their companies and a once thriving, fascinating creative landscape slowly die out.

But it has to be now.




Credits to http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/editorial/2007-11-25

And to Mr March for bringing this to my attention.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Added a Cbox....

Now ya'll can post how lame assed my blog is, so have fun cussing!

(I blame Dax for all this, had to take leave didn't ya? See?, Now I'm so bloody bored!

See I lied again....

Ok fine, so I've been lazy, but I did take "some" pictures over the weekend, which zoomed by mind you.

Sigh, some "teaser" pics now, will go in depth later on. ( Man, I need a lightbox of something)

First off, some Gashapons I picked up here and there, the latest buy being this series from Virtual On, ( Ya'll remember the arcade simulator don't ya?) Gods, I had fun in the arcades way back when.....


As you can see, I'm really lazy when it comes to taking pictures, lol .
This comes from the series I posted about a 'lil while back. Individual pics and character names will be up next.

The other set is from a bunch of Gundam Gashapons I picked up, maybe a month back. Bad assed memory nowadays.....


Same thing, the in-depth "review" as it were will be up later, as well as individual pics. ( I PROMISE!!!)

Ok, up next is just me showing off, I managed to pick up 2 figures from my all time favourite anime, Trigun - Planet Gunsmoke.

Here's Nicholas D. Wolfwood, conman, preacher and gunman, all rolled into one with Vash the Stampede ( or as fans of the anime will call him Vash da Stampedo)

Is that all I hear you asking? Well considering the fact that I'm NOT opening them, yes that's all folks! Remember, Love and Peace!



Tuesday, November 20, 2007

It's been almost a month......


Hahaha, let's face it, those that know me, know that I'm a lazy bastard....... It's gonna take a while for me to take pics, edit and post...sigh. I swear that I will....really ... I swear....



Anyhooo....... Quick update:
Re-issueing in Nov 2007 - Fix Figuration - Perfect Gundam (not spotted yet)
Re-issueing in Dec 2007 - Fix Figuration - #0013 "Deep Striker" (waiting for it still)
Releasing in Jan 2008 - SDF 1 Movie color version (pre-ordered)
Releasing in Feb 2008 - Cyclones (MegaHouse Version) (pre-ordered)
Releasing in March 2008 - Spawn Series 33: Age of Pharaohs
Releasing in March 2008 - Halo 3 Series 1 - Figures and Vehicles

Aiya, still got a lot more to go... just lazy to type....Hmmmm funnie how that word keeps poping up.....

Will update more soon.

Cheers!

Oh wait..... one last thing.

The shit list of toys I bought this month, truly crappy....

1) Yamato 1/48 scale VF1S- Roy (damn HLJ I'm still waiting for it!!!)
2) Yamato 1/60 scale Queadluun-Rau "Millia"
3) Yamato 1/48 Super/Strike Parts of VF1
4)Revoltech VF1A ( damn cool)
5)Revoltech Griffion
6)Revoltech EVA Mass production type
7)CharaWorks 1/144 Veritech Valkires
8)Kotobukiya One Coin Series Virtual One Trading Figures ( ya la, I know la, released damn
long ago....I'm slow la, what to do?)