The completionist mentality is dumb

Dex-chan lover
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Why would you spend hours of your life doing something you don't enjoy as part of your hobby? There is no way the satisfaction of having those extra hours to do literally anything you desire is greater than the dissatisfaction of having a few titles in the dropped and on hold list.
 
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It's very simple for me.
If I enjoy it, I will 100% complete it.
If I don't enjoy it, then I won't 100% complete it.
If I enjoy it but midway I start to not enjoy it, then I just stop doing it.
 
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As someone who regularly translates things I don't like, I can only say: it doesn't have to make sense.

People do much more nonsensical things than that in real life, so why throw stones at such a harmless activity that only concerns us?

"Dumb"? Why, I think so, but any closer examination of one's life will turn up lots of things that are pretty dumb, too. The OP's included.

In my own case, I normally keep translating series I originally liked, but only if they grow so outrageous that I start thinking, "Just where is this guy going to take his nonsense?" That I'm still doing Suicide Island and The moon is beautiful tonight, but first, die is thanks to that.

Heck, I've picked up projects just out of spite. You can call it scratching an itch: it's unpleasant, but the scratching itself is good. People derive enjoyment from the darndest things.

Other people have other reasons:

i. As a favour to a friend. I did it once. People hold their breaths to oblige someone they hold in esteem in real life, so why should that surprise anyone?
ii. Because it's easy. That happens sometimes when you're caught up with something and have the spare time. If a series is easy to do and there's no backlog, inertia kicks into action. "Eh, this takes me 30 minutes, why not?"
iii. Taking one for the team. Sometimes you don't like something, but your team members do, and you scratch each other's backs. Unless you're a One-Man-Army who only works alone, scanlation is quintessentially teamwork, and making concessions helps keeping the environment healthy.

"Completionism" is just one reason - a perfectly legitimate one - for scanlating a series one dislikes. But it's far from the only one. I think I know only one person that lets that play a significant role in their hobby.

Don't make blanket judgements on people. That's pretty dumb, too.
 
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May 24, 2019
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It really depends on why you're pushing completion.
Me, personally I drop titles I don't enjoy.
BUT
I had a friend that introduced me to manga.
I'm not really into the harem genre but he was really into it and I just kept up just so he could have someone to talk with about those.

Unfortunately my friend passed away after battling leukemia for several months.
He will no longer be able to finish his favorite manga - Quintessential Quintuplets.
He always was my closest friend so I would visit him every now and then, and tell him all about the manga just like we always used to.
So yeah I'm being a completionist just so I could have a proper closure of his chapter in my life.
 
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Completionist indeed doesnt make any sense,but it does makes sense for completionist!
wait that really doesnt answer it
 
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@DANDAN_THE_DANDAN

Depends how interested/invested you are with completion. For myself I barely have full trophies on some games even if I really enjoyed them.
 
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I think there's also another factor to this, if you don't mind me adding my two cents to the discussion. Sometimes, people can find enjoyment in things they don't enjoy, as bizarre as that sounds. For example, if you start reading something, and part of the way through, you find yourself no longer enjoying it, a part of you might want to finish just to say, "Well, I gave it a chance." Or if it's a popular series that you find yourself unable to get into, but know people are going to question you on it/your tastes, and you're the type that enjoys debates (or arguments, if you prefer that--not particularly my jam, but no judgment), then the slog of pushing through with the series now means you have "ammunition" to fire back with.

An admittedly silly example that I can think of was from years back, when the Twilight book series had blown up: I would routinely tell people that the books just aren't that well-written if you scrutinize them for more than a few seconds, and that while I would never tell anybody to stop enjoying them, I personally don't find them to be good books. Nine times out of ten, the reply would be, "Oh yeah? Well, I bet you didn't even read them, so you can't judge!" Let me tell you: I read those books cover to cover, petty as that was.

It's kind of like the spite example @Kendama mentioned above: even if the act itself isn't enjoyable, there could be something else that comes from the act that, on some level, you find rewarding. I used to think I would have a completionist mentality, but as it turns out, I've already dropped a couple of series from my reading list, simply because--to me--there was no enjoyable outcome to be had from finishing. They weren't particularly popular series, I hadn't gotten deep enough into them to warrant the "I gave it a chance" mentality, and ultimately, nothing of value was gained or lost in making that decision. It's sort of a case-by-case thing.
 
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i do find it weird myself but I'm also a big believer in if it floats your boat great go for it. For me I kind of treat time and money alike. Every dollar I spend on x is a dollar I can't spend on y so I try to figure out what I value. Time spent reading a manga, a book, .. that I don't like is time I can't spend on something else, reading a different manga, talking to friends, relaxing in the sun...
 
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There are games where I feel like 100% it is part of the fun like Undertale or Hollow Knight. If you don't want it, then it's fine if you stop playing because its no longer enjoyable. No one is going to judge you for not collecting all the trophies/spirits in Smash Bros, but its great if you do. It's a case by case, really. Same principle applies, here, as if you stop enjoying something you stop reading it.
 

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