Last week while taking the train home, I saw a kid with his head buried in some kind of Bakugan guide, and it got me thinking. The first thing was that it reminded me of when I used to sit on the same train with a printed Pokemon pokedex, pouring over move lists and trying to imagine new movesets in strategies. It filled me with a sense of nostalgia. The second thing was that it got me thinking about the future of anime.
Bakugan, one of those collecting and battling game franchises designed to separate kids from their money, has an anime to act as a half-hour commercial for the product. It’s one of the latest in a long line of merchandising engines, from Pokemon to Digimon to Yugioh to Beyblade and so on. The shows can still be pretty decent; there’s no illusion about their true purpose, but it doesn’t mean they can’t be entertaining.
Alcuni non leggono le righe in italiano e quindi ripeto qui i concetti principali.
RispondiEliminaBAKUGAN è una di quelle operazioni commerciali architettate per SEPARARE i ragazzi dai loro soldi!!!
Importante:
RispondiEliminacon "baka-gaijin" (外人のバカ)volevo intendere "il non giapponese è un idiota".
Important:
with "baka-gaijin" (外人のバカ)I meant "non-Japanese people are idiot".