Forum - View topicNEWS: One Piece #62's 1st Printing Matches #61's 3.8-Million-Copy Run
Note: this is the discussion thread for this article |
Author | Message | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
yamiangie
Posts: 465 |
|
|||||||
I guess we hit the ceiling on how many copies of manga they can do for a single print run.
|
||||||||
enurtsol
Posts: 14893 |
|
|||||||
Called it.
It's because of the earthquake+tsunami - lots of shops and lives destroyed. No sense printing more when less could be sold. |
||||||||
koinosuke
Posts: 274 Location: Fukushima, Japan |
|
|||||||
Are you serious? Unless you have some source to back that info up, that sounds like pure hyperbole. I don't think this has anything to do with the earthquake and only has to do with the fact that they doubt it'll outsell the latest volume, since the last two have sold so much its becoming doubtful any manga could really do better. |
||||||||
enurtsol
Posts: 14893 |
|
|||||||
You must've been missing all the Japanese news where a lot of sales are nosediving. A large area of Japan is inhabitable whether to wreckage or radiation. Up to 30,000 people are gone; multitudes more can't go back to their homes or lost big savings. Heck, April's new car sales -Japan's powerhouse- haven't been so low since 1968! It's amazing that One Piece's print run didn't decline - who's gonna buy all that and where are they gonna put it? The continuing crisis has done a number on the Japanese economy. |
||||||||
Lizzie_B
Posts: 302 |
|
|||||||
If only OP was this popular in America
|
||||||||
Lightning Leo
Posts: 311 Location: Earth |
|
|||||||
That's an amazing run, especially considering the circumstances.
No kidding, wouldn't that be awesome? It's a somewhat difficult series to warm up to, but once you get into it y'can't help but fall in love with the series. |
||||||||
Toriko36
Posts: 205 Location: Hoboken, NJ |
|
|||||||
I can't agree more. One Piece is a fun and very entertaining series. I currently just finished the 22nd volume of the manga and have only seen a few episodes of the anime, just to see the animation quality and see how the manga was animated. I won't watch the anime but will continue to read the manga. Though I can see why it isn't extremely popular because the long haul manga/anime(s), One Piece, Bleach, Naruto, etc are quite intimidating if you are thinking of starting them. I mean, they are all now at what? 300+ Episodes at least. If you haven't gotten into them now or even when they started, late 90's, early 2000's, it's tough to get into a 60+ volume manga series. Not to go off on a tangent, but maybe the price of tankoban's in Japan, roughly 400 yen ($5 US) compared to the price of manga volumes here $10+, make it a challenge for consumers. I know we will never buy 4 million copies of a manga (or maybe one day) but what if manga volumes were only $5 here? Would we have better buying power? |
||||||||
perroloco
Posts: 308 |
|
|||||||
I'm not surprised that the circulation stayed as it is..
Also, remember guys that in times of crisis products that entertain tend to rise in popularity since people want to entertain themselves to forget about hard times, and manga tankoubon aren't that pricy so I think it fits this criteria well. |
||||||||
koinosuke
Posts: 274 Location: Fukushima, Japan |
|
|||||||
I live in Japan. Believe me, the situation in areas up north is terrible...but nothing like the image you and the media seem to like to paint of vast swaths of land destroyed and a huge percentage of the population displaced. It's a tragedy that lays heavy on all our minds...but the great, great majority of Japan remains physically unaffected, including Tokyo and the entire Kyoto-Osaka-Kobe region, where a huge percentage of all Japanese people live. This idea that there aren't places to "put" more manga is ridiculous. Sure, the economy is down, but this is a $3 manga we're talking about, not a car that costs thousands of dollars. The earthquake has little or nothing to do with this. |
||||||||
enurtsol
Posts: 14893 |
|
|||||||
Oh, it goes beyond that. For instance, several major Japanese paper mills are based in northeastern Honshu and are now destroyed or water-logged and unusable. Paper industry anticipate prices going up (heck, even toilet paper). It'd cost them more just to do the same print run, add that to less being sold - it doesn't pay to print more. |
||||||||
All times are GMT - 5 Hours |
||
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group