Times are hard, i personally don't budget more than £15 a month for buying, though sometimes i build up a couple of months to get a bigger box set, i imagine it's pretty tough for a lot of people out there. And quite a few rather not buy at all.
I like to say fansubbing is the problem, but it almost certainly is. Pity, because its a good mechanism for gauging a series popularity.
For a start, the quality is high, any group with poor translations gets burnt, we've allowed DVD distributors get away with glaring errors in the past because we simply have no alternatives.
And... a popular series gets on average, 20, 30k downloads, others around 5-10k per episode (of course depending on group)
Those are numbers we'd never see at retail, partially because... it's free, and 90% of your audience has already seen it, and a lot of them think "whats the point of watching something again" for them anime is a free disposable entertainment source. Maybe, if lucky 10% of those guys will want to watch it again, but out of that, no more than 5% would be willing to buy it.
I can't help feeling simulcast is the way to win these days, crunchy have a lead, but they might get burnt by the established companies catching on, which is a pity because crunchy has an open boarders policy, Funi with their arrangement with Nico blocks any none-US IP. Probably by next year we'll see crunchy's new licences diminishing and nico/funi gobbling more. Bad news for UK fans.
Its sad, discs are dying, and it's no more evident than in the anime industry. I for one like the chance to show my support and have a few hardcopies. Perhaps it's time to start collecting figures... but i have nowhere to put them.
I like to say fansubbing is the problem, but it almost certainly is. Pity, because its a good mechanism for gauging a series popularity.
For a start, the quality is high, any group with poor translations gets burnt, we've allowed DVD distributors get away with glaring errors in the past because we simply have no alternatives.
And... a popular series gets on average, 20, 30k downloads, others around 5-10k per episode (of course depending on group)
Those are numbers we'd never see at retail, partially because... it's free, and 90% of your audience has already seen it, and a lot of them think "whats the point of watching something again" for them anime is a free disposable entertainment source. Maybe, if lucky 10% of those guys will want to watch it again, but out of that, no more than 5% would be willing to buy it.
I can't help feeling simulcast is the way to win these days, crunchy have a lead, but they might get burnt by the established companies catching on, which is a pity because crunchy has an open boarders policy, Funi with their arrangement with Nico blocks any none-US IP. Probably by next year we'll see crunchy's new licences diminishing and nico/funi gobbling more. Bad news for UK fans.
Its sad, discs are dying, and it's no more evident than in the anime industry. I for one like the chance to show my support and have a few hardcopies. Perhaps it's time to start collecting figures... but i have nowhere to put them.