NL comment sections when he makes fun of people on twitter: BASED GIGACHAD THATS MY GOAT OSHI STREAMER NL comment sections when he makes fun of weebs: Hey now, there's nuance to all walks of life...
The music doesn't belong to me. I think I found it looking up "comedy anime music" or something. If I remember correctly it's part of an RPG maker soundtrack.
Dude upset that letting people enjoy things they like causes them to make more things they like lol. That's got to be such a frustrating way to live, that other people having fun makes you angry.
Just Kate, NL only watched some classics like Ghost in the Shell and Ghibli movies. He does bring up Neon Genesis sometimes as a joke cause he knows his audience likes it
tf is he talking about, I love NL but man some of his takes are just...out there, that's like saying all fromsoftware games are the same especially DS series, demon's souls, and elden. It's a formula that works, get with the times old man.
This is no different to talking about how every other western game was about a white buzzcut military dude in the late 2000s/early 2010s, except weebs have a blindspot because Japan feels inherently 'exotic' to them. Anime/Manga/JRPGS in particular having a homogeneity problem isn't a controversial take at all. It's been known.
@@Nefariousbig Nah it's not the same. "Buzzcut military dude" is a specific character design, not an art style. This guy's complaining about an art style, not a character design. And yes, there are analogous things to the buzzcut military dude amongst anime circles - for example the lanky black-haired shut-in harem protagonist - that anime fans are just as sick of. It is true that there is a lot of homogeneity in anime-styled projects, and indeed it's been getting more homogenous over time as the industry gets closer to the ideal art style - but that's not unique to anime. Live-action has been homogenous for a couple of decades now to the point that I can't tell half the "Hollywood Chris" actors apart and struggle to follow some movies because characters look too similar. And American video games have been moving towards "photorealism" for about 10 years now, which by definition makes everything look the same because it's an attempt to bypass art style and depict reality itself.