• RiQuY
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    1 year ago

    I’ve just cancelled my Crunchyroll sub, not only because of the user content deletion but because they lock many translations and animes out of Spain and the quality of some subs are shit generated with AI. My new streaming service is nyaa.

  • Pika
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    61 year ago

    Crunchyroll has a comment section? I had seem ratings but never looked at the comments

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    I’m guessing that if it’s all cartoons, it’s mostly kids that watch it? The comments sections must be horrendous

    • ms.lane
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      21 year ago

      nyaa has a comment section.

      Better quality video too.

        • june (she/her)
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          21 year ago

          They’re probably referring to nyaa si which normally has either decent webrips, Bluray rips once the show is released physically, and at times with list 3840p shows.

          Comments section is kind of more to do with the specific torrent though.

  • @[email protected]
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    181 year ago

    Omfg the comment section lovers are literally a vocal minority, this is kinda silly to see play out.

  • @[email protected]
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    521 year ago

    Good. Not every website needs to be a social media platform too. There’s already plenty of communities on the Internet to discuss anime.

    • ms.lane
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      121 year ago

      Bad.

      Censoring culture is not good, making it so the only place to get news is from paid talking heads who would never bite the hand that feeds, is not a good change.

      The community is destroyed.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        This isn’t censoring culture. This is a streaming platform focusing on streaming and giving up on trying to be more than that.

        The communities still exist and will find a new platform. Just over a year ago there was a sizeable chunk of Redditors that came to Lemmy. It’s happened time after time when a platform goes down. Communities are much more than just the platform they are on.

      • @[email protected]
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        201 year ago

        And… Why is that?

        Anime can be found on tons of streaming services that don’t have comments, like Netflix.

        Anime in particular is pretty famous for having its own communities and niche spaces on the internet. If anything, Crunchyroll’s comments section seems to me like it’s unnecessarily fracturing those communities based on who watches on Crunchyroll vs other methods.

        There are costs to maintain and moderate communities. It seems to me like that’s adding a good bit of cost to Crunchyroll’s business model in exchange a vlrelatively small value provided to a small percentage of their customers. Whereas with dedicated social media platforms, the business model revolves around and only attracts individuals who highly valued that community. With a smaller community like that, it’s easier to rely on volunteer mods (like most of Lemmy) or a bit of ad revenue.

        • AnyOldName3
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          31 year ago

          Better have comments on Crunchyroll than make me go to R*ddit to find out if I missed something in an episode, especially as anime subreddits typically start permitting episode spoilers before the dub for that episode is out, so there’s often nowhere except the dub comments on Crunchyroll that’s safe to look for dub watchers.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    “I want to read comment sections on anime episodes, I must know what anime fans have to say” - statements dreamed up by the utterly Deranged

    • @[email protected]
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      441 year ago

      There have been several shows that I’ve watched on CR that have been made a lot better by being able to read the comments section. Either because it’s One Piece and there’s always one guy giving you the timestamp to skip the recap or because the series I’m watching is actually pretty bad and a bunch of people are making jokes at the shows expense.

      It’s been rare that I’ve seen someone on CR be overly negative or toxic without getting shutdown fast. It’s usually pretty wholesome and fun.

  • @[email protected]
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    261 year ago

    This saddens me. The comments of the animes I watched usually had some interesting trivia or background information that I had missed.

    • AnyOldName3
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      121 year ago

      Super useful for something like Overlord, where scenes with background information were cut and there’d be someone saying what else you’d know by this point in the manga, or if you’d forgotten something since watching a previous season and needed a reminder.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      31 year ago

      you can still use MAL with malsync browser extension and then you can get decent reviews you need

    • The Cuuuuube
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      51 year ago

      It would be nice if those comments were moderated, but mostly what I saw in crunchy roll comments was straight up fascist propaganda. I’m in a place where I’m like… Not everything needs a comment section. I can take the criticism this makes me a crunchy roll bootlicker. I’ll take that L, but know this: we should all be pirating stuff all the time given how the big corporations treat our art and creations

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    That was one of My favorite things about Crunchyroll. I love going through the comments after finishing a series and seeing what others were thinking. I know anime fans can be pretty crazy, but I very rarely saw toxic comments. It was mostly people talking about a shared experience and was surprisingly wholesome the majority of the time. I even got some good recommendations about what to watch next because of it too

    • @[email protected]
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      391 year ago

      Just to hazard a guess, it might be pretty closely moderated to keep the toxicity down. That might just be costing Crunchyroll more than they think it’s worth.

      • katy ✨
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        101 year ago

        this is exactly it; anytime you see a really wholesome comment section, it’s because they have a team to actually moderate it which costs time and money

        • AnyOldName3
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          11 year ago

          They banned someone for a few weeks who’d comment Dub time on dubs after some weirdos got irrationally angry about it and mass reported her. There’d also be a meaningful comment on the actual episode from the same user, but it wouldn’t be upvoted as much, so wouldn’t be displayed as prominently. Before the ban and after it was reversed, there’d typically be an argument in the replies to the Dub time comment between people angrily ranting about it and other people defending it.

          So there clearly was some moderation, but beyond an automated bad word filter, and I guess something blocking URLs, it was done sparingly and reluctantly.

  • Luden [comrade/them]
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    141 year ago

    This is a solvable problem but requires thinking about anything but profits for a minute. Require accounts and ban them permanently from all comment sections. They only won’t do this because it means that person might unsubscribe.

  • Stern
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    181 year ago

    Comments dont make money, moderation costs money. So pull it and make the site more like the other streaming services out there, make some PR word salad to justify it. Not surprising really. Of course maybe it really was a Salty Spitoon in the comments section. Either way, not exactly the burning of the Library of Alexandria.

      • Stern
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        51 year ago

        QA prevents them from losing money. Same with IT.

          • Stern
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            21 year ago

            Cost of moderation likely higher then lost profits from users who were only being kept on by comment section.

              • Stern
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                11 year ago

                It’s a fairly good bet considering the overwhelming majority of streaming services.

                • @[email protected]
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                  21 year ago

                  You mean the ones that are all failing right now for being fractured and having no appeal beyond whatever the latest binge is?