You can and I'll be damned if anyone says otherwise.OutcastBOS said:...If I can't include Megas ^_^
You can and I'll be damned if anyone says otherwise.OutcastBOS said:...If I can't include Megas ^_^
Dattebayo has no real translation (which is why they make it into a generic "believe it") but it is equally annoying. And i agree with the 50 episodes plot statement, any semblance of plot died long ago all he does now is get stronger to save a emo kid only fangirls like (and for weird reasons).thethingthatlurks said:The characters are annoying; why are we supposed to root for this upbeat twat, or have sympathy for the emo, or ignore the obvious uselessness of the stock love interest-ish?
The fillers...ok, blanket statement: if you don't want to overrun the manga, take a few months off. But don't make ~100 episodes of fillers, which only annoy people. And absolutely do not make pointless cooking fillers (cake in Bleach, some ramen malarkey in Naruto)
The story; it might be due to the fillers, but I'm pretty sure that the actual story was no longer than 50 episodes. Twat becomes ninja, twat's buddy falls to the dark side to kill his brother, twat's buddy kills his mentor and his brother, twat still looking for him. Is that about right?
But more importantly, it's in the nature of anime, or something I call Dragonball Z syndrome. Basically, you have a fairly average protagonist who must overcome some much stronger opponent. He (for the protagonist is ~99% sure to be male) eventually does after getting his arse handed to him a few times and subsequently training. But where from here? Well, how about a new, more powerful villain? Sure, so the protagonist is already stronger from the previous bout, so the new villain must be more powerful still. Keep this up for a while and you'll get characters that could probably annihilate the universe by farting, which is incredibly boring, and ludicrously contrived. Remember how quickly over 9000 became over one million?
Oh, and the whole "Believe it!" Is that also in the original japanese? If so, does it actually translate to believe it?
To quote Yahtzee, "Deliberately annoying is still annoying". I personally have better things to do with my time than watch a series whose central character makes me want to beat him to death with a ladle for an extended period of time, even if he does get better a few seasons in.DarkRyter said:snip
Take Naruto himself. He seems like a rather obnoxious brat, but from the very first episode, they explain why. Having to constantly live in amongst those who ostracize him as a monster made him an obnoxious brat. Becoming a ninja, having those adventures and experiences, and most important companionship with his fellow ninja, matured him as a character. The current Naruto is an almost completely different character than the annoying little kid, rather a respected, charismatic young man revered as a hero amongst his village yet still morally conflicted over how to act on a former comrade turned maniacally evil.
Character development yo.
Well, there's Stargate SG-1, but you're probably just talking about anime...theamazingbean said:Simply put, pacing. Naruto has some great fight scenes and some interesting plot lines and characterization, and maybe the writer could be given credit for trying to create huge, epic story, but nothing in the series is good enough to keep me interested over 100 non-filler episodes. Pacing is necessary, and at times, closure.
Here is a question, has any series EVER been still good aftet 100 episodes, or maybe 15 volumes of a manga?
All very true. Also, its more of those overly talented youth/youth centric series where twelve year olds act like adults. I think Naruto has some good points, the main character was an outcast but he doesn't ***** about it all the time for one, but they have way too many characters with increasingly ridiculous specials. That's fine for Ranma 1/2 and the ramen-round-up-noodle-noose, but Naruto seems to want to be taken seriously. My other misgiving is that with the exception of Tsunade the women are kind of sidelined. Some of them have really cool powers but they never get a chance to use them. Hinata could be a monster if she we're such a wet sponge. Even when the ever-annoying Sakura gets an upgrade she gets thrown into the healer role, oh wow, 'the Girl' gets to be the healer! that's new! I'm pretty sure that Ino starts to join her in the med-nin training. Besides all of that, 100+ filler episodes is pretty heinous.SimuLord said:Because there's MUCH better anime out there that people could be watching? Because Narutards exemplify every negative stereotype about fans of Japanese culture not from Japan? How about because yes, the show is all filler...and thus refers back to stereotypes previously referenced?