TheNingen wrote: Wed Mar 25, 2020 9:23 am
I'd argue that Pokemon is the biggest example in ABED's favor. It keeps trying to expand its lore and Pokemon and it's honestly fucking awful for it. Pokemon is stale. Another example is current Star Wars. It has a lore and powers it tried to expand with the new trilogy. It fell on its face and sucked.
Fans often don't know what they want. And when they get what they think they want, they hate it. Dragon Ball can't win there. And it's ridiculously easy to critique an already existing thing compared to coming up with something new.
You want a Videl spinoff? Cool. It wouldn't work. Because no one in enough fan quantity cares about Videl. No one wanted to see Gohan as Great Saiyaman. Why would they want stay at home Videl mom adventures or her fighting crime?
Or using a new protagonist/set of protags. Okay. What are their goals? Has to be about martial arts. Because that's one of the cores of Dragon Ball that can't be changed. So their goals are...becoming stronger? Exploring more places to learn and improve? We have that in Goku. And the Dragon Balls HAVE to be involved. They're involved in literally every arc of the story. Their namesake is the title of the show.
This is the core problem people don't get. You can't do something too new without betraying the spirit of what makes something what it is/was. You'll either change it to where it should have been it's own original thing because it's so vastly different and not in spirit of what you were going for, or it's the exact same as what you've seen and you'll complain about it anyway. There are core things about Dragon Ball that you cannot change. As there is with any story. And saying 'WELL THIS HAS DONE IT" isn't a valid argument when the shows or properties you're bringing up are either different in tone, genre, or intent to what Dragon Ball is.
Which is at its core: A martial arts/adventure story about a man named Goku who seeks to better himself and fight strong people and sometimes goes on adventures with his friends/saves multiverses. DC and Marvel are not comparable. Power Rangers is not comparable. JoJo is not comparable. They're not going for the same thing Dragon Ball is and do not employ the conventions that Dragon Ball does.
And even bringing up Yu Yu Hakusho. People care about the core 5. They care about Keiko, Botan, etc. No one would watch if they focused on a new group because that isn't who they watched YYH for. And back to Star Wars...when it began with the new trilogy, no one gave a fuck about Rey or the new characters. They wanted the old ones.
Pokemon isn't stalling out because they keep adding more lore and Pokemon to the series, they're stalling out because they've been shoving the exact same formula and stories into their anime and games for going on 30 years. That said, Pokemon itself isn't struggling with sales, just the anime is. The video games and card games still sell very well regardless of how many older fans stopped playing because they got tired of being shit on or completely ignored by Nintendo and the Pokemon Company.
Likewise, the problem with Star Wars isn't that the universe is too expansive and they keep piling more lore on top of old lore. It's, as the other guy said, because the fans have been miffed that we haven't had a universally accepted "good," Star Wars mainline entry since Return of the Jedi (and even that gets it's own level of hate because it isn't as good or mature as the original Star Wars and Empire Strikes Back). The lore expanding spin-offs and video games attached to Star Wars are far more popular than the actual numbered movies are.
Any large enough fanbase is going to look like it doesn't know what it wants if they all try to use the exact same program to try and entertain all the different audiences. Different groups within and outside of a given fanbase have different reasons for wanting or not wanting to engage with or support a certain franchise or brand.
Plenty of people in this day and age adore Gohan and the Great Saiyaman schtick. Hell, the highest rated episode of DBZ's original run wasn't a combat episode based around Goku, it was the episode Gohan transforms at the tournament and reveals his identity as the Gt. Saiyaman and Golden Warrior to his classmates and the tournament audience.
Dragon Ball doesn't necessarily have to be about martial artists in all of it's media and stories. Just because it's spent the last 30 years catering to young boys who only give a shit about violence and action, doesn't mean they can't make a side program for, say, fans who'd like a more slice-of-life kind of show about living in this universe.
What the initial ideas, themes, and goals of a franchise are or were is entirely irrelevant to it's ability to grow and expand beyond solely catering to it's original demographic or audience. No amount of "but the stories are fundamentally different kinds," is going to change that no work of fiction is obligated to continue telling that exact same kind of story ad nauseum.
The fact that some fans are exclusively a fan of the old works in exactly how they played out doesn't negate that other audiences are also interested in a franchise's premise and universe but don't necessarily like the specifics of the original source material. Likewise, just because nostalgia blinded fanboys wouldn't accept moving on with a new cast and exploring the universe and setting itself over just focusing on the story of the original main character, doesn't mean the fans who aren't . A world like Yu Yu Hakusho has a ton of potential to tell stories of different characters and casts before and after main character's time. Same for Bleach, or Full Metal Alchemist. When you make a world where almost everyone is inherently special and can change the course of history, you can write pretty much any kind of story into that world and expand a franchise's fan and consumer base far beyond the initial fandom.
It's narrow minded "fans" like yourself who cause franchises to stagnate and die off to begin with. The belief that because a franchise started with a specific type of story, or telling a specific character's story, or aimed at a specific audience, that it cannot evolve past it's initial conception and intent without "betraying what it is," is why many companies are afraid to branch out and make more money. Doesn't help that a lot of people who were fans of the original version are adamantly against anyone who doesn't like the original being brought into the fold or treated as just as valid and important as they are.