I have a love-hate relationship with CMX. On one hand, they're publishing Eroica. On the other hand, they make mistakes and the releases take ages.
Volume 13 came out sometime in July, and I though Volume 14 was coming out in November of this year. Then I found that it was coming out on the 21th of July, 2009.
Maybe it's because I live in Canada. Is
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... Do you mean it like " pretty amazing that CMX gave us at least 13 volumes, I think this July-stuff just means the series will be absolutely cancelled soon." or like " pretty amazing that Eroica is wanted in general, even after 30 years - and even when it´s only in Japan."?
...The more I think about it - there are quite a lot of manga classics which seem still madly beloved in their homecountry ( as far as I can say that ) and sometimes they also abroad -still! - quite popular. I mean, heard about that Dragon Ball Hollywood remake...?!
I won´t start with other older but popular stuff like Star Wars, Star Trek or ...eh... Led Zeppelin. :)
As for the FEwL scanlations: I´ve got a splitted relationship towards them. On the one side I think it´s quite interesting that there is a comparison existing, on the other one side I´m one of those serious bores who think of scanlations as unfair to manga artist, publisher & Co, especially if there is an official release but the scanlations are still circulating.
-die Heitere
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I don't think that publishing scanlations is unfair to the manga artists, actually. Even if I had read all of Eroica, it would have to be terribly, horribly, unbelievably bad to make me stop buying them. In the case of CMX, the rate at which they release their mangas is just amazing. Scanlations are all we have to last us through the Eroica-less months.
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That´s nice, but if I try to look at the whole picture ... I´ve got no statistics, but I´ve got the heavy guess that more than just a few manga volumes in the shops stay untouched because they were already existing as scanlations. I mean in general, not only FEwL. I guess now in modern Internettimes and with a oh-so-empty wallet more than just a few do without the unspoken rule(s) "If you checked out a scanlation or a fansub and you liked it, you will buy it if it comes out legally! And you´ll stop spreading copies of the scanlations / fansubs!". Anime House, a German anime distributor, just wrote a whole article about it, pointing to the fact that some German anime distributors stopped production with the the argument, the fansub market on the internet made it too unprofitable. I presume other factors played maybe also a role, but still.
- die Heitere
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But still, it might be different from you. It's just that everyone I know would rather have the manga actually in their hands, even if they read it online.
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