Member
- Joined
- May 25, 2023
- Messages
- 3
Yep, it's paywalled content after all.Wait, wouldn't that make this upload then be against the ruleset of mangadex?
Yep, it's paywalled content after all.Wait, wouldn't that make this upload then be against the ruleset of mangadex?
Welp I'm gonna just hold off on reading this then thanks.Yep, it's paywalled content after all.
A well-earned image.The difference on why there's more vocal peeps from EU is that there's a mindset of avoiding admitting you're from SEA because of how bad the image for SEA people has online.
Well technically those 3 countries represent 70 to 80% of the market.Yeah, and Europe is made up of Germany, France and Italy huh? The other 40+ countries are non-existant huh? Anyways, Dragonball might've been released in those countries back then, but today it's a different story and our problem is that THIS manga is not released in Europe...
Japanese execs are really set into the past and tradition and always doing the same old thing everywhere for everyone.A well-earned image.
It's also not just that, it's also because SEA readers paying to read manga? That's a laugh. Between SEA and EU readers, the former have a higher chance of treating manga as their 'right', rather than a product they have to at least do something to get.
Though in this case, I'll grant that K-manga is a pretty raw deal even for US readers. The business model is similar to readers in Japan, but that doesn't mean it makes sense for a global audience.
If you make broad statements, then get ready to receive equally broad replies. Now that I think of it, Spain should've gotten most of the translations as well, seeing as Panini did most of the work back then also operates in Spain. I think only the UK was the major country not receiving anything of that.Yeah, and Europe is made up of Germany, France and Italy huh? The other 40+ countries are non-existant huh? Anyways, Dragonball might've been released in those countries back then, but today it's a different story and our problem is that THIS manga is not released in Europe...
That's a very narrow pov. It is easy for outsiders to point at the caricature of Japanese execs as old doddering men who made their name during the economic boom of the 80s who can't change, and then correlate anything that they don't like with that image.Japanese execs are really set into the past and tradition and always doing the same old thing everywhere for everyone.
Just look at Nintendo.
I’ll check it out later, I don’t normally look at other websites for my mangadoes k manga work for you? I tried using my surfshark VPN on my PC and phone and in both cases, the app and site said that I am region-locked even when I set my VPN for US.
Technically this specific comic is officially licensed in some european countries. If anything, the issue is that it is published only in physical volumes while K-manga is a digital release simultaneous with Japan, so anyone not living in north America has to wait months before reading chapter 107.our problem is that THIS manga is not released in Europe...
You're going to be waiting a long time then. They dropped it because it got officially picked up.Not Tempest release, I advise to wait for the proper release.
I love how he casually forgets that France is the second biggest markets for Manga after Japan (and I mean Manga not locally produced Chinese and Korean Manhwas which are very big in their own markets too).If you make broad statements, then get ready to receive equally broad replies. Now that I think of it, Spain should've gotten most of the translations as well, seeing as Panini did most of the work back then also operates in Spain. I think only the UK was the major country not receiving anything of that.
So if you exclude Spain Germany, Italy and France account for 45% of the EUs population if you include it then it's 2/3rds. You can't make sweeping statements that the EU is backwards when it comes to anime and manga, when about half of the population had access to quality material in their own language more than 20 years ago.
It gets even better: At least in Germany the public broadcasters were showing animes like Heidi and Wiki as early as the 70s! And by the 90s pretty much every major broadcaster had multiple anime in their catalogue and the Lipzig Book Fair, a convention dating back to the 15th century and second largest book fair in the country, spun off the largest convention with ~100000 visitors annually, along the other three major conventions which get between 30k and 40k visitors.
Your statement was just false and overly broad. Accept it.
Read last chapter comments. They dropped it.Not Tempest release, I advise to wait for the proper release.