Robo4900 wrote: Fri Aug 14, 2020 6:01 pm
Kendamu wrote: Fri Aug 14, 2020 4:56 pm
I'm literally the only one among them who cares about the nitpicky details and I'd rather not burden them with the "every release is terrible" mindset when they're all
hardcore martial artists who happen to like DBZ rather than
hardcore DBZ fans that happen to train in martial arts.
But it's not nitpicky to point out that every release is terrible.
Personally, in your shoes, I'd take this attitude: Every release is terrible, so rather than advising them against picking this up, advise them to pick up whichever release is cheapest. They've all got serious problems in various different ways, so they should just pick whichever way of watching has them spend the least money.
You don't have to give them the full rundown, it's just a simple "Eh, they've all got issues; just pick up the cheapest one you can." No need for the whole schpiel about what grain is, why DNR is sometimes (but not always) bad, why Funi's DNR in particular is wrong, cropping, framing, etc... It's not needed.
Oh, you're right! When it comes to folks like
you and me it's absolutely not nitpicky to know the general details and say, "They got it wrong again."
It's nitpicky from the perspective of the martial arts couples I know who happen to also like Dragon Ball. They say things like, "Oh, the one where Goku and Vegeta fuse and fight that dude that's Majin Boo with a sword was so badass," instead of saying "Movie 12" or remembering Janemba by name, but they own DBZ-themed Jiu Jitsu rash guards and collect Dragon Ball Funko Pops and slap DBZ stickers on their protein shakers and can tell you about how much
fun they had showing the series to their spouse when they streamed it on Funi's site or with their Orange Bricks they bought back in 2007 to replace their bajillion VHS tapes.
My outlook going into this is that these folks are gonna hit me up saying, "Yo, Josie, I'm at Walmart and there's DBZ steelbooks. What are these?" I can say, "They're like the version you watched on Funi's website that's better than your DVDs but in 4:3 like when you watched it on Toonami instead of widescreen where they cut the top and bottom off to make it fit modern TVs," and then send them a screenshot comparison of 4:3 vs 16:9. They're not going to pour over the frames and colors and details like we do. I've tried it with them and they just kinda fall asleep because they'd rather just be eating, training, sleeping, or sparring than hear about lines of resolution and black levels and stuff.
That's where I'm coming from when I say, "You folks have at it! Tear Funi a new one!" It's important to a lot of fans and I would be doing the same thing if I was spending more time with Dragon Ball fans who also
happen to train rather than martial artists who
happen to like Dragon Ball a lot.
So, go get 'em!