CESA Boss Talks Japanese Gaming Problems
Thanks to GameSpy for its interview with CESA executive managing director Kazuya Watanabe, as the head of the "game industry's trade organization" in Japan discusses issues such as the Japanese games industry's dislike of the used videogame market: "Used software sales are now legal and covered by the law. Despite the fact that the court has passed judgment, the software manufacturers are still not satisfied with the outcome because of the high percentage of used sales in overall Japanese game sales." He also addresses the perception that many Japanese PC titles are adult-oriented: "They stand out. They do not have a large market, but they catch your eyes. If you look at that, you may think, 'Boy, these Japanese are very strange.' It is not the case."
From the article:
"Also, ownership is an important component of American culture. People do not like to buy things unless they feel that they own it with no strings attached"
How is it that the head of Japan's major video game trade group has more insight into American consumer desires then our own trade groups?
I can't see how used games is really any different than used book sales. Publishers also have to deal with these things called public libraries, where books can be traded and lent around freely. A new release book often sports the same price tag as a new release game.
I honestly don't see Mills and Boon whining about how much of their stuff is in a used book shop.
I suppose if the game industry wants to cut down on used game sales, they could always re-release their old stuff as an added bonus with the new game.
READY.
PRINT ""+-0
It literally means 'pervert'.
I think you are trying to make out the Japanese to be more different than they really are- for example, the tentacle rape is just a side effect of their weird legal system (no human penises allowed, no sex between women and animals either, but sex with imaginary creatures apparently falls into a legal grey area... go figure!); and the apparent youth of the manga characters is illusory- the Japanese consider the characters to be older than Americans do- there are some cultural differences relating to reducing sun exposure in Japanese women and physical differences that tends to make them look younger to western eyes than they really are. You cannot really condemn Japanese Hentai manga unless you understand the environment that it has evolved in.
I mean, the Japanese may well consider LA porn to be barbaric and offensive (you can see pubic hair?)
-WolfWithoutAClause
"Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"I mean, the Japanese may well consider LA porn to be barbaric and offensive (you can see pubic hair?)
I'm not sure that the culture that created "Max Hardcore" has any business commenting on the supposed strangeness of other country's porn. Who was the comedian who said "The first time I saw a Max Hardcore film, I didn't know whether to jerk off or call the cops"?
Most of the oft-sighted strangeness of Japanese porn either has a direct analogue in our porn, or is otherwise a product of the strange obscenity laws imposed there.
the tentacle rape is just a side effect of their weird legal system (no human penises allowed, no sex between women and animals either, but sex with imaginary creatures apparently falls into a legal grey area... go figure!)
It's interesting--I'm sure the reason why the censorship laws were made was so the citizens wouldn't become corrupted by porn, but I'd bet that the Japanese are more screwed up by what resulted from the laws than what would've happened without them.
Of course, I don't think the fact that Japan was the only target of a nuclear attack in history is merely incidental to this situation, either.
Rob (I guess it was either hentai or superpowered mutants)
I'll buy GBA and PS2 games used, but I won't buy PC games used typically. I would not want to buy one with a CD key that is locked out from online play/updates.
So the solution, in my eyes, would be for the publishers to incorporate keys into their console software. They'd have a real uphill battle doing that though (for everything but the Xbox and very few PS2 games, its not as though entering your CD key is going to get you anything)
I don't have to assume. Characters in middle school are not adults. characters in school living with their parents are not adults. Characters who have their age explicitly stated as under 18 are not adults.
Do you insist on 'human rights' of those imaginary drawings?
No. Where do you draw that inference?
Surely there are cartoons that are intentionally made to look like underage, but if you read Japanese language you'll find that none of them explicitly state that they are underage by themselves.
I have been consuming manga for over ten years, and you are wrong.
Even in the real world, do you know there are places in Tokyo where girls of 18 and over wear school uniform and pour alcohol to glasses?
Yes. I have been to said places. Have you?
Look, if you want to argue that in comics, people can be adults and look like children and go to school like children and not drive cars like children in modern Japan, or that in magic comic world age 14* is legal adulthood so there's no problem, that's OK. Some people argue that. I don't care, no kids are being hurt by this stuff being published. But don't say something that isn't true. These comics are clearly depicting minors.
*14 has been age of consent in Japan until very recently so even then it's not a problem in most cases.