SuperCyan2 wrote:I'm on both sides of the coin because if you're only on one or the either you're losing quite a lot. Legally speaking, you can't get Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT broadcast audio on the Dragon Boxes nor an actual 'Complete BGM Collection' soundtrack so what happens in this case? Peeps share content among themselves privately, or not.
You lot who are against piracy (or pretend to be, anyway) need to remember that it's thanks to piracy that a lot of content has been preserved from being utterly and completely destroyed from existence. If memory serves, two European dubs of Anne of Green Gables and The Three Musketeers were recovered thanks to the fans and released officially on DVD otherwise those dubs would have vanished forever. Another one that springs to mind, DBGT's TV-Special Big Green Dub which has been kept in secrecy but someone out there at least has it. Just a few examples (not forgetting the obvious one, DB JPN BA).
Lastly, I've bought and spent a lot of money on official merchandise of Dragon Ball that I love having but then there's stuff one just can't get legitimately so that's where piracy comes in. Fans have to do the job which the company that owns the franchise should have but didn't.
Yeah, pirating things that you just straight-up can't get by buying official releases is totally fair. The legality of it says otherwise, but if you have no other option, then that's kinda what you have to do. Speaking as a die-hard Ocean dub fanboy, I'm very used to this type of logic, and from what I understand, people online generally seem to agree.
The point is, though; make an effort to support official release in ways you can. Sure, I can't buy the full Ocean and Blue Water dubs on DVD, but I can still buy the manga in one of the many different forms it's available in.
SuperCyan2 wrote:Also, it's quite delusional that there are Dragon Ball fans here who think Funimation would actually get permission to use the Japanese BA on their releases (they've not done a good Z release since 2011 but that's beyond the point) from Toei Animation. Everything that Funimation does in regards to Dragon Ball and other properties they need to ask the original Japanese companies/owners that own them otherwise they would get in serious trouble so yeah, forget about that "The JPN BA is on Sabat's hands so it's up to him" no.. it's not. It really isn't.
I'm sorry, but this is just plain ignorant.
First off, Toei straight-up don't care about the broadcast audio; they refused to take it when Kei offered it to them. If they cared anywhere near as much about it as you're implying they do, they would have taken it back when Kei offered it to them several years back.
Second, Toei have let Funimation do two HD Blu-Ray releases of Z. Much as we fans generally don't like the "Season" sets, Toei seems to approve of them, and they approved of the much-loved Levels too. And yet, Toei don't have any HD release of their own out for anything before Kai. If Toei were concerned about Funimation having a superior product for audio, video, or whatever, they wouldn't have let them do it in HD.
In theory, the fact Kai was in HD, and Funi have only done BDs of the Z series so far kind of works as an argument, except that Kai has top-quality audio on the Japanese side, and Funi's Blu-Rays contain cleaned-up Japanese audio for Z anyway. If Funimation having superior audio to Toei's releases was a concern, but Kai makes the HD video not a concern, then surely Kai's high-quality audio makes the audio not a concern? But if that wasn't the case, if the audio was a concern, Toei wouldn't have let Funimation put cleaned-up Japanese audio on their BDs; they would have insisted on keeping it as muffled and distorted as the raw Dragon Box audio.
Third, sure, Funimation's releases have been a bit crappy recently in terms of video, but aside from some issues with the style of redubbing of the Remastered dub(Which is largely down to opinions anyway), and some mixing issues in the dub tracks from the Season DVDs and the original Z DVD singles, the audio has always been pretty much top-notch. In particular, the BD vesion of the Japanese is rather nicely cleaned-up. No reason to believe they won't continue to do their best with the audio side.
Fourth, and finally, yes the broadcast audio is in Sabat's hands, but no one with any idea what's going on has said that Sabat himself is the one this is up to. What's been said is that Sabat will try everything within his power to get the audio used on an official release in the future. Funimation would do well to put it on a release next time they do a release. As for when that will be, who knows.
In any case, as I say, Chris Sabat says he'll try everything within his power. Funimation are infamous for wanting Dragon Ball to always seem modern, shiny, and new. The Japanese audio being rather poor has always been something that's held that back, and between that and the poor handling of the video, a lot of the hardcore fans have a lot of lost love for the modern releases. A modern release with the high-quality Japanese audio may very well attract a lot of new buyers, and regain a lot of favour with the hardcore fans, and it'll make the Japanese track fit in line with the modern feel they've always tried to go for with their post-2006 releases that aren't the Levels or DBoxes.
In short: Including the broadcast audio is something Funimation will almost certainly do next time there's an official release(And there will be another official release sometime. If there's one thing Funimation loves more than anything else, it's re-releasing Dragon Ball Z), and there's no reason to believe Toei would block them.
Sure, you can morally justify pirating the audio now, while it's still officially unreleased, but don't try to push that it will never come out; not only is that unnecessary, but it's rather naive to do so.
The point of Dragon Ball is to enjoy it. Never lose sight of that.