Grimlock wrote: Tue Mar 12, 2024 9:10 am
No, it did not.
I get what you mean- that isn't what you were saying (to be charitable).
The way this is worded though comes across like you're outright denying that your words made me feel a certain way:
Me: "Your post came off a certain way to me"
You: "No, it did not"
When you read it like this, it comes off like you're trying to dictate the experience I had reading what you wrote when that's not what you're trying to do (again, being charitable here).
You're imprecise with the words that you use, which might be part of the problem I'm talking about: That you paint with too broad of a brush when it comes people who don't like Heroes.
there's no room for misinterpretation on what I said. Especially if you do follow and keep up with my posts, which apparently you do as per your last paragraph.
You're right, I do. So I know you tend to be dismissive of people who don't like Heroes.
It's very clear that what I find to be stupidity is the idea of "Star Wars fans refuses to aknowledge anything without involvement from George Lucas as canon"
This is still painting with too broad a brush though. For instance, I could see someone coming to this viewpoint by virtue of having actually checked out and disliked enough non-canon material to determine that they prefer Star Wars when Lucas is involved.
much like I don't get offended when someone is in any way in disagreement with me.
You don't get offended, you get very dismissive. Like, "Ugh, you're one of
those aren't you" is the energy you give off when you interact with people that don't like Heroes.
There is no valid reason for dislking Golden Coola while at the same time praising Golden Freeza, which I have witnessed happening many time before. They are both and very equally nonsensical, they are both presented with very equally poor explanation and they both have horrendous designs. But it's Golden Freeza the one to be much more welcomed by the general people because of one very specific and clear reason.
Well, Golden Freeza isn't a particularly inspired idea to begin with, but I would argue that it works better with him than Cooler since it better plays to Freeza's character: It makes sense that a petty and vain person like him would want his new form to be gold. Plus there's the implication that he's just straight up copying the Super Saiyan transformation.
Cooler in contrast isn't petty or vain like Freeza and is more bland in characterization so giving him a golden form doesn't really play to his character the way it does with Freeza. Freeza's new form is gold because it was a conscious design choice on his part to establish that he's the best. Why does Cooler make his new form gold? From what I can tell, only because Freeza's new form is gold. The least they could have done was make him make his new form a different color than gold. How about "Silver Cooler"? That would have at least been somewhat clever.
It is an arcade game, it is not your conventional animated series or manga. It tells its story through dialogues without cutscenes. The story is interrupted so you can play right in the middle of it before it goes back to the dialogues.
I've played Super Dragon Ball Heroes World Mission so I have an idea of how the story is presented in Heroes (and I'm guessing World Mission isn't all that different from the main series in that regard). I'm guessing you assumed my engagement with the brand was zero considering you were speaking to me as such.
Someone wrote:No, it mischaracterizes the characters. They don't feel Toriyama at all.
Yeah, well, get to used to it. Toriyama is no longer with us.
If said people think the characterization in Heroes doesn't feel right, that implies that they at least checked out enough of the material to form an opinion on it.
Also, people complain about characterization issues in Super too.
Someone wrote:The designs are bland. / It's fanfic. / Just to smash figures together.
Nothing different from Dragon Ball Super, then. And while they both share these similarities, one is much more welcomed by the general people because of one very specific and clear reason.
One of these is the main product the revival era revolves around while the other is a fanservice video game series. Acting like they're equal in stature is a false equivalency. Toriyama's involvement is very much a factor in why people like Super more, but Heroes isn't the main product of the revival era and never was. If no one was taking Toriyama's involvement or lack thereof into account, Heroes would likely still be less popular than Super since Super is the main product.
Someone wrote:Super Saiyan 4 Gohan/Broly, what a load of 1990's/2000's fan crap
What the hell Super Saiyan God Super Saiyan, Super Saiyan Rosé, Super Saiyan White (commonly known as "Ultra Instinct") and many other transformations are?
Your fake quote is about giving existing transformations to characters that never had them in the series proper. Your response to that is about the new transformations Super introduced. You're conflating two different things.
Yeah, none of these specific reasons are valid. All of them is also applicable to the other series, yet they are actively ignored. Because, again, one is much more welcomed by the general people because of one very specific and clear reason. That's when this issue becomes a problem. Some people do have valid reasons for not liking something, it's just that it's not often we come across them, generally it's this presented above type to be more commonly found.
I'm going to end this post with this: I think if Heroes was producing stories on the level of say, the Bardock special, you'd see more people taking it seriously as a brand. I don't think fans write off Heroes because it's not canon so much as because its just not very good. It not being canon just makes it easier to ignore.