penguintruth wrote:OutlawTorn wrote:Part of the problem is I think those same elitists believe the term "hardcore fans" can only apply to them but I've got to wonder, how many of them actually supported each and every Dragon Box release and how many of them thought "meh, it's fifteen years too late"? Unfortunately, we don't know what the status of FUNimation's license for the Dragon Box masters are as the footage for the Level blu-rays were from generational prints.
Dub fans buy every crappy release Funimation puts out so they're the ones that are hardcore fans, not the people with standards who wait for Funimation to not screw up? Well, when the Dragon Boxes came out, I bought every one of them.
Where did I say buying every release makes one a "hardcore fan"? You can be a hardcore fan
without buying the series (no, that does
not imply or endorse bootlegging) but when the Dragon Boxes were announced with the "hardcore fan" label slapped on them, you would see the fans of the Japanese version strutting about like it
must be talking about them. Furthermore, if you really read what I had said, you would realize I wasn't saying fans of the Japanese version aren't "hardcore fans" rather it was the elitists in that group who felt "hardcore" can
only apply to fans of the Japanese, thus excluding fans of the FUNimation dub. The complete opposite of what you were accusing me of saying.
But, yeah, if there's someone who bought all of the single DVDs and all of the season sets and then all of the Dragon Boxes, it wouldn't matter which version they prefer they would certainly be able to claim they are a "hardcore fan" but what does such a label really mean? Like I said, it doesn't matter which version of the show we prefer, none of us are better than the other and it's only the arrogant and self-righteous who would even entertain such ideas.
It's great you bought all of the Dragon Boxes, so did I. If I thought they would even be a possibility do you think I would have bought the season sets? Hell no, but for all intents and purposes it really looked like that was the best we would get for DBZ on DVD. Unfortunately Toei really screwed up big time letting that horrid version be licensed out to other distributors. While I don't personally care for the Faulconer soundtrack, I can sympathize with those who do and
they deserve to have DBZ presented in as perfect a release as possible as those who prefer the Japanese version.
When the dub is almost a different show, how can dub fans be considered fans at all? They're fans of something DBZ was turned into, not fans of what it is.
Of course, such a phenomenon is not strictly limited to FUNimation dubs or English dubs in general, but it's really the same show nonetheless. Sure, the dub is
far from ideal and has stupid dialogue strewn through-out, but we've left the days of VHS behind where you had access to just one or the other. With the DVDs, everybody has the option of turning on the subtitles even when they are watching the English (or the language of the dub they watch) version. The fact is, casual fan or hardcore fan, we are all equal and don't have to put up with the bullying behaviour of being looked down upon because we dare to enjoy something other than the Japanese version.