Dex-chan lover
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2018
- Messages
- 3,132
@TTX
> fanservice = sex sells
I disagree.
Fanservice is something made to make people who are already engaged with the work (fans) happy (service). Even when using narrow meaning of "sexual fanservice", works with fanservice usually advertise and keep the audience with other facets of the work.
Sex sells is about making sexuality the selling point of the work. For example, pretending Tsukihime is a dating simulator where the MC gets to romance vampires, nuns, demons and other sexy girls, and putting an R-18 tag on front. (that description is only technically correct - it's claim to fame is its engaging story of bloodshed, supernatural and insanity. Most games of the genre pretend to be sex games, because it's hard to sell a game with a slogan like "this game will make you cry rivers!")
In my opinion, only seriously ecchi works (mostly harems and other romantic comedies) can be said to use sex sells.
> fanservice = sex sells
I disagree.
Fanservice is something made to make people who are already engaged with the work (fans) happy (service). Even when using narrow meaning of "sexual fanservice", works with fanservice usually advertise and keep the audience with other facets of the work.
Sex sells is about making sexuality the selling point of the work. For example, pretending Tsukihime is a dating simulator where the MC gets to romance vampires, nuns, demons and other sexy girls, and putting an R-18 tag on front. (that description is only technically correct - it's claim to fame is its engaging story of bloodshed, supernatural and insanity. Most games of the genre pretend to be sex games, because it's hard to sell a game with a slogan like "this game will make you cry rivers!")
In my opinion, only seriously ecchi works (mostly harems and other romantic comedies) can be said to use sex sells.