PeripheralVision said:ejleon said:
Completely fine for anyone to stop any time they want. This was never the issue, so please stop changing the subject. This isn’t about forcing the idea of people finishing everything they start against their will.
And this is also not about having time either, that is handled by time management for each person, if you are too lazy to do this, that’s not my fault.
My point is that people who don’t observe the entire product, should not rate / review the product as if they had, that is unfair, for the reasons I’ll explain.
As I said …
— There are anime where the first 3 episodes are not that good, but the entire anime altogether is good once finished.
And on the other hand …
— There are anime where the first 3 episodes are good, but the entire anime altogether was terrible.
The problem is that I leaned this from continue the anime and finishing the full series.
But you are still ignorant of this, because you did not finish the anime.
How do you address this issue?
People rating actually good anime bad, because they just didn’t like the first 3 episodes, but other people rating it good when they finish the entire anime.
This completely messes up the MAL Rating & Review system.
I solved it by saying that people can stop an anime any time they want, but only when a person finishes the entire anime, does an option to rate and review the anime comes up.
This would make this fair and even.
And yes, I do make a point to finish everything I start, aside for other issues preventing me.
You completely miss my point, which was again:
At they very least, I think you would agree that if I watched the first 99 percent of a film and found it horrible, that I am not being shortsighted because I did not see the very last minute.
If the first 100 minutes of a 101 minute film are horrible, is it so shortsighted for me to say this film is horrible in my view because I did not bother watching the last minute? You can disagree if three episodes is enough, but at the same time, saying that the last minute must be so important compared to the preceding 100 minutes is completely insane.
It is a strawmen to suggest that I was believing you to be advocating for some law where people are forced to watch an anime to completion. I am saying that only accounting the scores for people who completely finish a series would skew the data the other way. Please take the time to understand my argument Ejleon. I clearly understand your argument.
Many people willing to sit through an entire film may be fans of the film or the materials, but they may not represent a majority of the audience, many of whom may have walked out for some reason.
For example, say 70% of the audience walked out at the last 20 minutes of a 2 hour film, and their average score was a 3. The 30% who liked it enough to stay the entire duration who rate it a 10. Now by your logic, this hypothetical film should be a 10, despite being disinteresting to a majority of the audience, whereas by my calculation it would be ~5. Do you still agree that the 70% of people who walked out have opinions that should be discarded because they did not see the entirety, despite seeing well over three-quarters of a film? I could hypothetically have a poorly acted play that has good actors in the last scene. Are the previous scenes irrelevant due to the aformentioned one good scene? I think not.
(Films like
Black Christmas (2019) are an example of a film which has an audience that it panders to. For television series,
Brickleberry and
Paradise PD are shows with a fanbase whose crude humor is serviced well by said shows)
Again, I hate to talk down to you, but again, you made such an unreasonable amount of assumptions regarding me attempting to "change the topic".
You can disagree whether or not three episodes is enough. I myself think that three episodes would depend on the series. At the same time, the other extreme is so demanding for works that might not otherwise deserve it. I think there is a clear middle ground here. Should
One Piece be unrated simply because it still airing?
This of course depends on the series, its themes, and its genres. Slice of life Iyashikei series do not have the narrative that mysteries do. Because of this, the importance of finishing a mystery greatly outweighs that of finishing a slice of life focused on having quote unquote "good vibes".
If you cannot write a good story in 400 pages or a thousand pages, then the next 400 or a thousand pages are likely to not be as good. Like it or not, the beginning of a story affects the quality. Again, whether or not you think 3 episodes is enough is one thing, but the idea that one cannot draw any judgements for any body of work until the very last minute is insanity. You can certainly say to yourself "well, I finished everything, why should not others", but I think this is an unreasonable standard to hold yourself to as well as most people who don't have time to waste on a director or writer unable to write good material up until the last minute.