Undercooked Sausage wrote:I know Mike has been fairly gung-ho about how we shouldn't complain about the cost of this set. I get it, I guess, I was there in the 90s. I definitely bought subtitled tapes of Trigun that had 3 episodes on it for thirty bucks, but there is a reason why that business model for anime went away. I've bought this show twice now in the last five years(three times if you're counting Kai), and I've gotten very used to spending less than a dollar an episode on it for at least a couple years now. Seeing that nearly/almost double because of a blu-ray release does not make any sense to me whatsoever. Who is that price aimed at? The hardcore will be happy with their dragonbox, Pony Canyon remastering, and default japanese language track, the casual fans have either the bricks or the Dragonboxes or even Kai to choose from. Who really wants to spend 2 dollars an episode on Dragonball Z in 2011?
I'm predicting these sets will fail because there is so far nothing attractive about them to any particular audience out there and the oversaturation of Dragonball home video releases of the last couple years is seriously not helping things whatsoever.
I think there's quite a few DBZ-centric sets of fans that FUNi still hasn't exactly catered to, which they theoretically could with this new set (although it's questionable.)
For one, it's difficult to find a version of the dub that's close to the Toonami version now in terms of VA selection or visuals, thanks to FUNi redubbing over and over; FUNi's Blu-Rays have video that resemble that version color-wise, at least, which means it'll probably be the closest we'll get to that as it is. Perhaps they'll finally toss in some previously TV-only things. Maybe they'll even have high-quality versions of classic Toonami ads... I'd certainly enjoy a release like that.
They've also never finished releasing the entirety of the Mexican dub. With BluRay having more room for audio options, it's possible they can add this in now and finally cater to those fans.
Of course, if this turns out to be simply the best-looking version of Z, videophiles who prefer visual quality over authenticity to the Japanese version may consider this an "upgrade."
Some good bonus content in general would be good as well.