Joined December 2012
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Once you start gaming on PC that console shit dead ngl
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You think because you say nothing You are strong? 貴様は強くない
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ᵇᵃⁿᵍ bang BANG
Jun 16
Despite now being seven years old, Devil May Cry 5 just had its best year of sales yet. vgc.news/news/despite-now-be…
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"Pirated manga readers are not our opponents. They are our future audience. They are proof that demand already exists"
In 2016, I received an email from an aspiring manga artist in Morocco. It began like this: “I want to become a mangaka, but there is no manga publishing industry in Morocco.” Many people around the world love manga and read it, but when you look globally, there are many countries where manga is simply not published at all. In some places, there is not even a publishing system(including publishing, translation, and distribution) in place. Even where books exist, the infrastructure for printing, distribution, and bookstores is often lacking, making it very difficult for a true industry to develop. Telling manga fans in those countries, “Your country has a relatively high GDP per capita, so you should buy manga,” is meaningless if there is no actual way for them to buy it. That is something I find deeply painful. Why is it that the manga industry has not been able to properly serve those regions? Even in countries where publishing exists, manga books are often too expensive. The price of a single tankōbon book is $ 15 to $ 20, which is high even in the United States, especially when today’s digital entertainment offers so many alternatives at much lower prices. So, this is why I believe the future of manga is clearly not limited to print publishing, but must include digital services—manga that can be enjoyed in a reasonably accessible and affordable way. If such systems are established globally, I believe the manga industry could grow dramatically. In North America alone, a tenfold expansion would not be unrealistic. Even countries without any publishing tradition could develop sustainable manga industries. Once official digital services exist in each country, they can generate tax revenue, and governments can more seriously address piracy. At that point, creators and aspiring manga artists can also demand proper enforcement and protection. Most importantly, it would create opportunities for local aspiring manga artists. And those opportunities would, in turn, strengthen the global industry as a whole. When a country’s manga ecosystem develops properly, it becomes a cultural export industry. From a government perspective, piracy then becomes something that can and should be actively addressed. The first people to pay for legitimate manga services will, in many cases, be the very readers who once relied on piracy. They are not enemies of the industry—they are its earliest supporters in waiting. Pirated manga readers are not our opponents. They are our future audience. They are proof that demand already exists. In late 1990s Korea, manga piracy was widespread, and attitudes were often very hostile toward paid content. Many believed that paying for manga was unnecessary, or even that the industry itself should not exist. At the time, Steve and I did not fully understand this. We were wrong in many ways. But later, when proper legal services were introduced in Korea, readers were more than willing to support them. They paid for content gladly, and the Korean webtoon industry grew stronger, eventually becoming a major source of IP for film and television. We learned, through experience, that the joy of not paying cannot compare to the deeper satisfaction of supporting and sustaining the culture you love. Piracy users were never the enemy. They were simply manga fans. And all manga fans, in the end, are on the same side. Through our mistakes, Steve and I came to understand this more clearly. What needs to be done is simple: build proper digital manga services. Ensure fair pricing. And most importantly, help each country develop its own manga ecosystem. Because only then can a truly global manga industry exist. And only then can the works we create truly reach the world. To be continued...
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OC I like cerakote 😛
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>"bricking your device from emulation"
Replying to @Dannt_Em
"just emulate bro" most modern games have such big specs that getting a device to run them is already an undertaking and second sure i'm going to risk bricking my only phone/pc just because i don't want to be called a larper
Community note
It's almost impossible to brick a PC by running emulators. They are normal user-level software. Actual bricking requires low-level firmware flashing that emulators don't do. Millions emulate safely daily. youtube.com/watch?v=B8lMeR… xda-developers.com/emulation-myth…
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That’s Mainlander.
My Chinese fans really cooked with this outfit.
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>” Without the silicon Satan you are devoid of your own thought.”
"grok says",,look at .you . Without the silicon Satan you are devoid of your own thought. The Bible says you will not be saved when the final horn sounds and the flock is called home.
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miscellaneous horses
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Replying to @CzShO65M1PLDv5U
私が…作者です
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hes deaf cus of all the hooting and hollering joseph did in sdc
get this old mans hearing checked
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Do y’all remember this part 4 episode? #backrooms #jjba
the sun
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When you bleed on it it activates like the stone mask and grips onto your pussy with unstoppable force
we are ALL buying this
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Gray Newell, son of Valve co-founder Gabe Newell, finished third in the LMGT3 class in his first-ever 24 Hours of Le Mans. Driving for the Heart of Racing Team alongside Jonny Adam and Eduardo Barrichello in an Aston Martin Vantage GT3, Newell made it to the podium on his Le Mans debut after completing the iconic 24-hour race. The 24 Hours of Le Mans is one of the toughest and most famous races in the world, so getting a podium finish in your first attempt is a huge achievement.
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Jun 14
According to persona fans you can only be a fan of a game if you have played it yourself
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cracking up that the replies are almost exclusively Americans saying that every shower in the whole dang country inexplicably has different controls and all of us do the same humiliation ritual at hotels
アメリカ式シャワーの出し方わからなさすぎて、出るまで5分くらいかかった😅
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Calling yourself a gamer when you don't play games is like calling yourself a vegan when you jerk off dead squirrels
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they were parading elmo's head around on a pike last night
Jun 3
Elmo hopes both teams have fun! 🏀🏀🏀🏀
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