The General Anime Thread...

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wtf.

I wanted in on teh hype, but 2001 already. Screw you all.

Well, you can still post all those Fuu pictures if you like, it's not like we're going to punish you or anything. At least I won't, if anything. :sly:

As for Japanese anime in 2001, I guess that Beyblade was its worst moment? On the plus side, there was also the Cowboy Bebop movie... And Spirited Away.

And Prince of Tennis.

Ok, scratch that last one, that was just me being silly. :lol: But the other two are still good.

In Portugal, it was the time where I fell in love with Gosaurer. As a wee nipper, it was the right moment to watch such a show, but it left some good memories nonetheless. Although it was a 1993 show, not a 2001 one...
 
Classic formula of person's level of shouting causing a separate spinning top embodying a spirit to gain enormous power.

Well, it made the boys go "That's so kakoii. I wanna be kakoii too and feel the power."

*goes to Walmart and spends $10 on a crappy toy*
 
Classic formula of person's level of shouting causing a separate spinning top embodying a spirit to gain enormous power.

Well, it made the boys go "That's so kakoii. I wanna be kakoii too and feel the power."

*goes to Walmart and spends $10 on a crappy toy*

Hey, that's definitely Beyblade alright. People shouting at spinning tops to summon giant monsters of death... It's not your usual spinning top game, that's for sure. But I never got into the Beyblade craze, and I bet many of my school mates just used cheap Chinese knock-offs anyways.

Then again, that's how children's shows are meant to work; show the kids the fancy flashing lights and hot-blooded personalities (as hot-blooded as you can get in such young kids, that is), and then pray that those lights will convince them to blow their (parents') money on the toys. Toys which of course don't do half of the things that the shows proudly display...
 
Hey, that's definitely Beyblade alright. People shouting at spinning tops to summon giant monsters of death... It's not your usual spinning top game, that's for sure. But I never got into the Beyblade craze, and I bet many of my school mates just used cheap Chinese knock-offs anyways.

Then again, that's how children's shows are meant to work; show the kids the fancy flashing lights and hot-blooded personalities (as hot-blooded as you can get in such young kids, that is), and then pray that those lights will convince them to blow their (parents') money on the toys. Toys which of course don't do half of the things that the shows proudly display...

I was an engineer with beyblades. The official US products were actually worse than the 3rd party and knock offs believe it or not. I regret the one or two times I nagged my parents about buying them at Walmart. The range of available models were lower so there was very little experimentation you could do. Most of the US ones were either very gimmicky or had the plain flat-tip base. They also had the scrawny short rip cords which were bent out of shape because they were crammed into their packaging with the gears facing in.

When you went to places selling the generic stuff though, you had access to the models the US domestic market didn't have. Knock-offs of the US models were made thicker so they weren't as likely to break (i.e. Dranzer S). Rip cords were 2 to 4 times longer than the US rip cords, weight disks had way more variety and were more fun (the over-sized ones with pieces of flint stuck to the end created sparks!). Some Asian beyblades were sold as a set, and most knock offs at some point were sold in little plastic container sets containing 3 or 4 beyblades. Most base pieces have metal tips (which was good because that lasts way longer than a plastic tip), and some bases were made entirely of metal, allowing your spinning top to hold more momentum that your competitors.

And finally on top of all that, they cost way less! The biggest drawback to the knock-offs were the fact some pieces didn't fit with other parts, but this stuff is plastic so that's nothing a little sanding can't fix!
 
Wasn't FLCL released from 2000 through 2001?


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Witchblade and Area 88....fantastic series'. 👍 (not 2001 but I was going through that list and remembered those lol)
 
I wanted to watch Hikaru no Go at some point in time. Guess I can after I finished Shirobako.

BTW, I finished all of Nodame Cantabile. Not quite sure what the meaning of the ending is, but it was overall an enjoyable experience. I might be saying that from a very biased POV because I'm in a certain phase at the moment.
 
BTW, I finished all of Nodame Cantabile. Not quite sure what the meaning of the ending is, but it was overall an enjoyable experience. I might be saying that from a very biased POV because I'm in a certain phase at the moment.

Lol I'm watching that show right now.
 
I was an engineer with beyblades. The official US products were actually worse than the 3rd party and knock offs believe it or not. I regret the one or two times I nagged my parents about buying them at Walmart. The range of available models were lower so there was very little experimentation you could do. Most of the US ones were either very gimmicky or had the plain flat-tip base. They also had the scrawny short rip cords which were bent out of shape because they were crammed into their packaging with the gears facing in.

When you went to places selling the generic stuff though, you had access to the models the US domestic market didn't have. Knock-offs of the US models were made thicker so they weren't as likely to break (i.e. Dranzer S). Rip cords were 2 to 4 times longer than the US rip cords, weight disks had way more variety and were more fun (the over-sized ones with pieces of flint stuck to the end created sparks!). Some Asian beyblades were sold as a set, and most knock offs at some point were sold in little plastic container sets containing 3 or 4 beyblades. Most base pieces have metal tips (which was good because that lasts way longer than a plastic tip), and some bases were made entirely of metal, allowing your spinning top to hold more momentum that your competitors.

And finally on top of all that, they cost way less! The biggest drawback to the knock-offs were the fact some pieces didn't fit with other parts, but this stuff is plastic so that's nothing a little sanding can't fix!

Wow, I wasn't expecting you to deliver so much insight on this matter, guess there's more to you than what meets the eye.

So the generic stuff actually offered more variety and sturdier parts overall compared to the official stuff in the US, eh? Looks like I underestimated that possibility, it seems, from what you say. For a change, they did offer more for less (of a cost), while actually providing the players with a more comprehensive set of parts and some neat bonuses (the flint thing does sound pretty cool, to be honest, never thought you could get a Beyblade to shoot out actual sparks). It's definitely very interesting that all those things combined made up for stronger, more fun Beyblades than the original, officially-licensed products. Well I'll be darned...


Hey, Steel Angel Kurumi, now that can definitely considered as garbage. Even worse than Beyblade, I dare say. At least Beyblade had some sort of purpose, Kurumi was another case of using sexualized women for the sake of... well, using them with no real, tangible goal. Also, I remember seeing Hikarian in 2001 in Portugal, but that was the original version, not the one that was broadcasted in Japan at that time...

SVX

Hmm, there seems to be a bit of a reliance in that post of yours... :sly: I don't know, some sort of sunny reliance.

Also, I really like the style of the fourth picture within that spoiler tag, I can't quite explain why. It has this "realistic yet cute" feel to it, and it's very well executed. 👍
 
Wasn't FLCL released from 2000 through 2001?

It was basically released in 2000 in its entirety, then the whole team slacked off to release the 6th episode almost a year later. The wait was killing us all. I remember dropping whatever the hell I was doing back then when a friend of mine informed me that Furikura was out. It was all my 56k connection could handle.
 
I'm really not sure what to think of this.
Casting Jim Carrey as Kaiki in a live-action Monogatari series would be hilarious, though.


... Do you browse NicoNico or this other site regularly?
Not sure if Monogatari would work in live action. I don't think they could get the Shaft head tilt (tm) right.

Most of the pics I find are from various crappy Facebook groups.
 
I watched Miss Monochrome last night, and two thoughts came to mind:

1. With the way her voice is, I think that voice would be fitting for a Japanese voiced GlaDOS,
2. If she and Hatsune Miku collaborated, I think the world would explode.
 
I like Gangsta. A lot. Everything about it is on point. Especially when everybody just came off of DanMachi and whatever.

2. If she and Hatsune Miku collaborated, I think the world would explode.
It has to be out there. I'm too lazy to look for it right now, but with a little searching on Safebooru you could get it in less than 3 minutes.
 
Gangsta has my interest, looks promising and I hope it only gets better.

SNAFU is fun, been watching it in dips and drabs lately. Initial D 5th Stage or Nichijou should be next on the watch after SNAFU

Anybody seen Mekakucity Actors?
 
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