Forum - View topicNEWS: Kickstarter Launches to Publish Naruto Manga in eBook
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Replica_Rabbit
Posts: 354 Location: Portland |
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Why this need a Kickstarter? It Naruto, it going to sell anyway
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ickybott555
Posts: 41 |
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More than likely Shueisha turned down the offer to work on this. Hell, I would get this myself. |
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Яeverse
Posts: 1148 Location: Indianapolis |
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Uhm cartridge based? Why? This isnt 2002.
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ZestyLime
Posts: 23 |
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What is the point of this device? E-Readers have had wi-fi for like, 15 years now. This device is a regression of technology presented like it's something new.
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chronium
Posts: 294 Location: Canada |
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This is just a big waste of natural resources. It wouldn't be so bad if they just marketed this as a e-reader that is designed to read any manga comfortably not just one series.
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Agent355
Posts: 5113 Location: Crackberry in hand, thumbs at the ready... |
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An ereader specifically designed and optimized for manga is an awesome idea, but only having the ability to load one series at a time is a huge step backward. I would want a device I could connect to, say, Shueisha’s manga + app and be able to read a variety of series in better resolution than an ordinary Kindle.
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Emerje
Posts: 7428 Location: Maine |
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I'm guessing because it's the cheapest option available. No wifi or Bluetooth, no rechargeable battery, two very slow loading LED screens and probably some shockingly simple hardware inside. At best this is an SD card reader with two simple screens mounted to it. I'm guessing the bulk of that ridiculous $635 price tag (or $465 for the early bird option) is the manga content itself, it sure isn't from hardware expenses. Emerje |
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Mr. sickVisionz
Posts: 2175 |
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I think it's a kinda cool idea, mainly aimed at people who want to have something physical and specifically Naruto manga related but have zero interest in collecting like 50 lbs of comics.
A lot of people are harping on it only being one series and I agree if we're talking about the value per dollar proposition of the device, but conceptually I'm not against a one series device. I probably would have been as much of a manga collector as I was an anime one had something like this existed. Having said that, I'm not too keen on this. The value proposition isn't there. The tech is probably like $20 in Shenzhen to acquire and construct and I don't care how big or illustrious the series is, you start asking $600 bucks I think you're eliminating all but the most top end of buyers and imo the design doesn't look luxurious enough to suit that crowd. Honestly, this device won't work imo until JP decides that a like a $300+ per user digital only licensing fee for a single series is crazy stupid expensive. I'd buy stuff like this for manga I liked if the price wasn't approaching monthly rent/mortgage. |
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kpossibles
Encyclopedia Editor
Posts: 154 Location: USA |
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It's e-ink, similar to Kindle. Reminder that most of the cost is the digital copy of the series! The cheapest digital is $6.29 (Kindle) with 73 volumes is $459.73. Regular physical volumes are $9.99 MSRP so the cost for the entire series in physical would be $729.27 (although with Right Stuf sales, it could be as low about $401.50 new). However with this Kickstarter, you're getting a special E-reader that will work with various other special eOneBook series if you like the feel of physical manga while reading on an e-ink device similar to Kindle. Overall, it's a preference thing and if you want to own the entire series digitally while saving room on your bookshelves. A single device in Japan costs ¥35,000 JPY before tax. Full series range from ¥10,000 to ¥39,400. (src) FYI Fist of the North Star is also available as an SD card cassette in a Japanese/English combo for anyone who would like to get it separately (you would have to use a Japanese forwarding service or shopping service to buy it though).
Shueisha & Viz resolution for their Kindle editions is still fairly compressed IMO. In comparison with Kodansha Comics through their Humble Bundle and Bookwalker volumes, Viz series have more jpg compression overall. I'm basing this opinion off my Bookwalker copy of a Japanese volume of Kimetsu no Yaiba and Kindle copy of The Right Way to Make Jump. Your point about being able to download stuff is valid too, but the main target audience is probably connecting some physical only manga collectors with enhanced digital. |
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