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Convention Events and Programming => Anime, Manga, and Japanese Media and Culture => Topic started by: Tanuki19 on January 29, 2010, 09:25:55 pm
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i prefer to read the manga so i can give the characters their voices instead of having to suffer through their voice if its bad in the anime.
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I enjoy both and kinda go on series by series basis. Stuff like Gantz or Initial D I prefer to read, due to the fact that a 3-5min conversation in the manga will get stretched to fill an entire episode in the anime often leaving you on lame and needless cliffhanger.
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It dependsss.
FMA, Gunslinger Girl manga = way better.
FLCL, Cowboy Bebop anime = way better.
Generally the thing that came out first will be better but I'm sure there are exceptions.
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Manga. Got tired of watching anime, takes too long, and I only like rewatching old series I like. (like Wolf's Rain)
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the animes usually seem to just drag things out and have the longest conversations. the mangas just get to the point.
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Truth. I like manga more but some anime are better, like my spiffy diagram shows.~
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yeah, that IS one spiffy diagram.
and the mangas are cheaper! :]
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It dependsss.
FMA, Gunslinger Girl manga = way better.
FLCL, Cowboy Bebop anime = way better.
Generally the thing that came out first will be better but I'm sure there are exceptions.
Agreed, it really does depend.
Some animes I just get so caught up in the beauty of the animation as well as the way the story is told and the music. On the other hand, with manga I love when it's more detailed and goes more in depth with the plotline and characters pasts.
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I prefer the manga in almost anything I've seen other than Kuroshitsuji. That was just the perfect plot with the perfect ending.
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The answer is both.
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i like being able to tote around a manga book so you can read it if you're bored.
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Mainly the manga because it doesn't (always) take it's sweet time with scenes. Plus in most cases the manga is the original version so I like to read the creator's idea.
To give an example on the time part, I watched Eyeshield 21 where the scene included a flashback while they were playing. The one play and the flashback took a total of 8 minutes. I went back and checked the manga for that scene and it was 3 pages.
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I like anime personally...although I do agree that the original creator's work is usually distorted when animated, I still prefer watching it over reading it. My G/F & I can watch it at the same time then...we love to watch movies & shows together. I don't really spend a lot of time reading with the little free-time I get.
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mostly Manga because It helps me study movements and the art tends to be more detailed. And it's easier to carry around with you to enjoy at your leisure. I also feel it's less expensive. >_>
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Most anime just seems like a bunch of fillers with no real linear story; you can skip around without missing much usually. I do like the animation in anime far better than manga, though. I prefer dubbed anime (as uncool and blasphemous as that sounds), because I like to be totally immersed in the art itself rather than the words at the bottom (sometimes I don't even pay attention to the plot.) Also I don't have to listen to a bunch of 6 year old squeaky voices. .... supervillains are an exception to that, of course >.>
In my own opinion, manga has far lower standards in its art and mostly what I see is a bunch of speed lines. .. I guess that depends on if you're reading shounen or shoujo, though.
To each their own. Being an artist myself, the most important thing is the art, so ... that's why I choose anime.
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would you recommend eye shield? chris really likes the manga
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If I HAD to choose a medium I'd pick manga. Easily accesible, inexpensive, art, awesomeness, you can just flip through boring parts instead of having to sit through it, more engaging, etc etc etc
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would you recommend eye shield? chris really likes the manga
It's worth a look I think. I only saw a handful of episodes off of youtube and it seemed pretty good. From what I remember it feels a little slower than one might imagine while reading it. Thankfully they don't drag one game out for a dozen episodes.
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Most anime just seems like a bunch of fillers with no real linear story; you can skip around without missing much usually. I do like the animation in anime far better than manga, though. I prefer dubbed anime (as uncool and blasphemous as that sounds), because I like to be totally immersed in the art itself rather than the words at the bottom (sometimes I don't even pay attention to the plot.) Also I don't have to listen to a bunch of 6 year old squeaky voices. .... supervillains are an exception to that, of course >.>
In my own opinion, manga has far lower standards in its art and mostly what I see is a bunch of speed lines. .. I guess that depends on if you're reading shounen or shoujo, though.
To each their own. Being an artist myself, the most important thing is the art, so ... that's why I choose anime.
This^ I also prefer the blasphemous dubs as I don't like to read my television lol.
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except for YuYuhakusho that follows the manga So well!
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the manga is just so much better
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I'm going to eke by on a technicality, which this thread topic states, watch or read, it does not say BUY!
I got into this whole thing because I wanted to support good animation. It just so happened that I read a few manga, and got sick to death of reading American comic books afterwards. Some series, say Fruits Basket, you HAVE to read the mabga, or you just won't know the 1/2 of the story. And for me, even if you read the manga, you still may not get the entire story. Karin, or Chibi Vampire is another example, but even the manga cuts off too fast.
I think this argument is like deciding which is better, painting or sculpture. They serve two different purposes.
The biggest problem I have with manga, is that libraries or something like Netflix doesn't carry them, so I would have to actually buy them to read them.
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I'm going to eke by on a technicality, which this thread topic states, watch or read, it does not say BUY!
I got into this whole thing because I wanted to support good animation. It just so happened that I read a few manga, and got sick to death of reading American comic books afterwards. Some series, say Fruits Basket, you HAVE to read the mabga, or you just won't know the 1/2 of the story. And for me, even if you read the manga, you still may not get the entire story. Karin, or Chibi Vampire is another example, but even the manga cuts off too fast.
I think this argument is like deciding which is better, painting or sculpture. They serve two different purposes.
The biggest problem I have with manga, is that libraries or something like Netflix doesn't carry them, so I would have to actually buy them to read them.
i liked the chibivampire manga so i decided to buy the first disc of the Karin anime and the plot was ENTIRELY different! it was a whole nother story but with some of the same characters!
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I gotta agree with the Netflix thing. If you're into anime more (or maybe less) than manga, Netflix is less than $10 a month. If you spend more than $10 on manga per month, the alternative is watching it instead, where you can see up to 10 or so episodes for the price of one manga. Almost anything there, too.
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Karin, as opposed to Chibi Vampire, is one of those production company ploys to milk as much out of the market ASAP before it dies. There's plenty of those.
Storied such as Kanon, Clannad, I would prefer to view the anime, as the series were done so well, that you can really feel the pacing and the drama unfold, whereas if you were speedreading a manga, you may miss the subtle cues.
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KEY/KyoAni anime are gorgeous, the manga adaptions don't even compare.
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also angelic layer anime is pretty different then the manga, good different
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I'm not a big fan of manga that seem to have taken cels directly from the anime. Gantz and Hellsing are two that come to my mind. Not that there is anything wrong with them, I just feel a big WHY?
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Storied such as Kanon, Clannad, I would prefer to view the anime, as the series were done so well, that you can really feel the pacing and the drama unfold, whereas if you were speedreading a manga, you may miss the subtle cues.
Wow, this reminded me of one of my favorite mangas. It's Kanon, an unofficial version, but it is done incredibly well. The pacing follows the slow and subtle speed and one of the best chapters has about 5 sentences through 20 pages.
Agreed with Angelic Layer anime > manga. The manga, while fun, seemed too rushed and I would have enjoyed it if they stretched it out just a bit.