all thanks to the glorious golden era of Toonami.AlexKid said:Anime has successfully penetrated the West and the fan base has increased exponentially. Back in the early 90's, anime fandom was a very small, geeky subculture that didn't seem to be going anywhere. We were just glad to have a few OVA's get translated into English and could have never imagined how popular this medium would become eventually.
Nowadays anime is a permanent fixture of mainstream pop culture. Some people like it and others hate it, but it's here to stay. Personally I'm happy about this as it's never been easier to get hold of anime, I had to jump through loopholes and pay high prices for a badly dubbed OVA on a VHS tape.
Really?AlexKid said:Anime has successfully penetrated the West and the fan base has increased exponentially. Back in the early 90's, anime fandom was a very small, geeky subculture that didn't seem to be going anywhere. We were just glad to have a few OVA's get translated into English and could have never imagined how popular this medium would become eventually.
Nowadays anime is a permanent fixture of mainstream pop culture. Some people like it and others hate it, but it's here to stay. Personally I'm happy about this as it's never been easier to get hold of anime, I had to jump through loopholes and pay high prices for a badly dubbed OVA on a VHS tape.
I'm still hoping for Spice and Wolf and Anime no Chikara project (which is less likely to happen) but hey even Card captor sakura got a sequel after 10 years.I agree that there are less sequels these days.
Earlier getting a sequel is no big deal but these days...it's hard to get a sequel...even for a decent popular anime.
These are the sequels that I am looking forward to:I'm still hoping for Spice and Wolf and Anime no Chikara project (which is less likely to happen) but they even Card captor sakura got a sequel after 10 years.