Higurashi no naku koro ni

I watched the first season a while back, pretty mysterious, scary, disgusting, but still, I watched the second season to find out what the hell was going on actually. And like what many others told me, it explains everything.

I wonder what story will the 3rd season tell since everything seems pretty much complete. Perhaps the background story on oyashiro-sama?

Anyway, here’s a song from the higurashi game that’s been haunting me for the past month. Enjoy!

Lyrics

"You" by Dai

あなたは今どこで何をしていますか
この空の続く場所にいますか

今まで私の心を埋めていたもの
失って初めて気づいた
こんなにも私を支えてくれていたこと
こんなにも笑顔をくれていたこと

失ってしまった代償は
とてつもなく大きすぎて
取り戻そうと必死に
手を伸ばして もがくけれど
まるで風のようにすり抜けて
届きそうで届かない

孤独と絶望に胸を締め付けられ
心が壊れそうになるけれど
思い出に残るあなたの笑顔が
私をいつも励ましてくれる

もう一度あの頃に戻ろう
今度はきっと大丈夫
いつもそばで笑っていよう
あなたのすぐそばで

あなたは今どこで何をしていますか
この空の続く場所にいますか
いつものように笑顔でいてくれますか
今はただ それを願い続ける…

The 2007 Odex Fiasco

Alright. This is an overblogged topic but as a fan of anime myself, I want to put my thoughts out there.

Here’s what’s been happening in the anime scene in Singapore for the past few weeks. Everyday, there’s an article in the news regarding this incident.

Local anime distributor, Odex, has been sending out legal threats to many people for downloading anime. People who received those letters were shown a list of their downloads mostly, perhaps all of them, using the bittorrent protocol.

These people were asked to go down to the Odex office to sign an agreement which basically admits that they downloaded and promise not to do it again. However, from what I understand, the agreement allows them to further legally screw you whenever they feel like it. Downloaders also had to pay sums of $3000~$5000 ($2000~$3300 USD), which is a sum of money not to be taken lightly.

Odex claims these amount of money are used to cover their lawyer fees and the costs incurred to track down the downloaders. It’s in the news that they have the info of about 3000 IPs. Some may belong to the same person because local ISPs here give dynamic IP addresses.

So let’s assume 1500 people are going to be sued for an average of $4000. Odex acquires $6,000,000 in it’s lawsuit rampage.

Oh, the youngest offender so far is a 9 year old. He wasn’t given a chance.

The response, a majority of fans began discussing this legal threats on the forums. Someone managed to find some information on one of the directors of Odex, Stephen Sing, and his posts in another forum.

"Nope~ Me too busy sueing people~" and "Hahahaha! I double-6-ed so many downloaders~"

These 2 posts, obvious that it was about the recent legal threats Odex has been giving, further infuriated people which resulted in headline news:

When interviewed, he claimed it was taken out of context and he had forgotten about it because it was posted 2 months ago. However, it was actually 2 weeks…

Poor guy now has his address, Identification number, photoshopped pics of his photos all over the net now.


Some interviews with Peter Go, another of Odex’s directors, claim that they only want to stop piracy and help anime flourish in Singapore. But shooting out lawsuits is definitely not the way.

The majority of downloaders are casual fans and only want free stuff. You stop them from downloading, they’ll just move on to other sources of entertainment. They won’t buy VCDs or DVDs. Odex loses here.

The real fans who will fork out money to buy the DVDs of a series they like, may stop buying from Odex now. Most of them probably never bought from Odex in the first place, because of the poor translations.

Originally, the anime community in Singapore is small. Thanks to fansubs and the ease and speed of bittorrent, this community grew fast. Cosplay events became bigger and quality improved over the years. 4 years ago, I would feel embarrassed reading manga in public while dressed in my formal work attire. But not anymore now.

These lawsuits may discourage and kill alot of fans. There’s a good chance anime’s popularity in Singapore will fall thanks to Odex.

Many fans now live in fear everyday, fear of getting the Odex letter in their mailbox. Not all can easily fork out that sum of money.


Links to relevant articles:

Jan 9th 2007 – DarkMirage: An open letter to Odex

Aug 16th 2007 – CNet Asia: Kicking kids for profit

Aug 18th 2007 – Death threats against Odex

Aug 22nd 2007 – Riuva: Vision of Odex

Odex’s website


Note: I may still edit this entry further in future

DragonBall Z 外伝 - サイヤ人絶滅計画

 

Back when I was around 10~11 years old, DragonBall Z games on the NES were the craze among RPG gamers. I’ve played and completed DBZ 2, 3 and 外伝. Of all 3, 外伝 is my most favourite one.

If I remember correctly, you move around with cards and monsters are random encounters. You battle using cards too. There are many different cards with different kanji characters. A certain combination will allow you to use special moves.

For example, to execute Son Goku’s famous Kamehameha you need to use cards in the order "体爆光". For Super Kamehameha "拳拳体爆光". Cards come randomly. Z card allows you to choose the character you want. Sort of like a wild card.

You start off with being able to use only 3 cards in battle. Then slowly progress up to 7(? can’t remember).

If anyone’s interested, you can find the NES rom here.

Looking at these screenshots brings back memories. I’ve even recorded the OP theme music and used it as my ringtone!

Would you play a Final Fantasy game where…

The main character, the hero of the story, the protagonist, is a fat guy?

I know I will. And I expect an epic storyline.

If the storyline involves him saving the world, I can accept that.

If there’s romance in the story like FF8, I can accept that too. In fact, that might be awesome depending on how SE does it.