I loathe anime face claims.
I've been reading this thread for awhile, and I've been loving it. I love to judge things. I love to sit down with my cup of orange juice and munchy crackers and read about everyone's crazy ol' opinions and laugh and agree and disagree and shake my head at how much I think someone might be wrong or right. It's fun. It's even more fun to let my firm grip on being amiable and friendly to people slip in cases like this and judge the crap out of people I disagree with. It's relaxing to be like, "Wow, that was sucha dumb thing to say" or "Holy moley, so-and-so has no idea how bigoted/hypocritical they seemed just then" rather than to go through the exhausting process of forcing my brain in the empathy mode to be like "I understand both parts of this argument and everyone is presenting valid arguments". But I definitely don't send nasty PMs letting people know how stupid or foolish they are. I have my laugh, I might think a little less or a little more of someone, but in the end it's all just opinion, and the beauty of opinion is it's wholly subjective. Even those people who want to be like, "My opinion is the greatest opinion and the only opinion and all those who disagree are wrong" that's their opinion. Neato.
Mini-rant over. I love anime. I watch it more than probably any other form of visual media, and I get really invested into the stories, the characters, and the universes they portray. However, I just can't handle anime in a "realistic" setting. Anime is great because it plays on tropes and archetypes, taking them to the extreme, throwing in a dose of humor or severity, then taking a hammer and smashing everything so you either laugh like a hyena or bawl your eyes out because it's just so darn beautiful/tragic/horrifying/insert emotion eliciting word here. That kind of stuff doesn't work in the real world. Anime is like a super hyped version of reality, within its own reality it's great - within the reality of everything else... it's not.
When I see an anime avatar, I immediately form two thoughts: "What anime is that from because it looks like it could be awesome/terrible and I should see it/avoid it like the plague" and "Crossing this person off my list of potential partners". In my experiences outside of Miz (and within Miz), the people I have read that use anime avatars have writing styles/characters/general ways about them that I can't handle. Sometimes I can't handle the wild, flamboyant, and all around ridiculous hyper-nature of their PC. Sometimes I can't deal with the way something is always happening for no apparent reason, but it's imperative the random event come to conclusion or the world is going to end. Other times? I just don't like looking at the anime face. I think someone said they could turn anime images into real people in their minds. I applaud you. To me, anime characters aren't people. They're completely removed from my idea of what is real. If I see an anime face, my mind crafts an anime world, because that's where they belong.
Also, the way I create my own characters heavily affects how I view other people's PCs. I spend hours a day looking for the image of a person that I'm loosly forming in my head. It's a ton of work, searching through this flood of images that may or may not be pornographic or so photoshopped the people look liked dolls, but eventually I find what I'm looking for. I honestly don't get how anyone could use an image for their character that they don't view accurately represents their character. I'm pretty sure that happens though, and if I see a picture for a person that doesn't fit in my head, I just shrug and assume they know their own character better then I've been able to glean from the CS. But when someone uses an anime avatar, it's the same thing. In my mind, they've chosen that specific avatar because that is how they view their character, and that is something I can't write with.
I'm wrong a lot. Sometimes, there will be anime avatars that have interesting characters. Sometimes, there will be people with really cool real life models who suck on the muck of a third grader's literary booties. Judging things by their cover and acting on those judgments definitely means that there are good people I'll miss out on eventually. When that happens, I don't have an issue swallowing my pride and thinking, "Well gee willikers, I was wrong about them!" But. Butty but but but. The majority of the time? My intuition is sound. It helps me. It lets me look at something and decide "Yes, I'm going to put in the time to make an effort with this person" or "No. Just no."
And the beauty of this? I don't say anything to them. Is that being a coward or untrue to myself because I'm not sharing my opinions 100% of the time? Absolutely not. I'm using my brain to make my own choices. If those choices are wrong? I have the leeway to go back, admit I was wrong to myself, and start fresh with the person writing. If that person doesn't want to write with em because I turned them down before, then I don't want to write with them because they can't get over their own petty reasons. Every time you interact with someone you leave an impression. Those impressions are taken into account. In my mind, using an anime avatar is like showing up to an interview for a business firm wearing a tutu and horse head mask. You might qualified. You might be over qualified. But I will take one look at you, shake my head, and see the next person because that's how I choose to run my business.
Also? If you write poorly or are an uninteresting writer on your CS, that's way worse. From what people have said, I feel like they probably agree with that. Avatars aren't the be all end all, but a bad avatar is definitely a good way to turn people away from your CS. Bad photo edits, popular celebrities, really crummy CGI, even avatars that are "loose" depictions of your character (the model has brown hair and blue eyes while the character has blonde hair and green eyes) are all just as bad as an anime avatar, but for different reasons. Mizahar is a pretty amazing place with a bunch of amazing writers, but that's the thing. People want to write with those amazing writers. They don't want to write with someone who's going to waste their time, because that's the currency we spend here. Time. And if I can weed out people I know are going to waste my time from the beginning, I'm going to do that so I can dedicate my time to people who are also going to invest in me.
That's my take on things. I get riled up when I talk about stuff I have strong opinions about, so if I was offensive to anyone please just know that I probably do think you suck, but my opinions of you are pretty fluid. There's this weird thing (and I suppose it's probably more of a good thing than a bad thing) where people seem to have this idea that they deserve equal opportunities in terms of writing partners.
Mizahar is a writing site. Mizahar is also a pretty darn serious game. If you think that people should judge you solely off of your writing, I shake my head at you - unless you really can maintain a small enough OOC presence to achieve that, then more power to you. Your avatar, your boxcodes, your font choices, and the way you conduct yourself outside of the main roleplaying forums all heavily affect how people view you. If you're using bright pink font on a puke-grey background, I will judge you. If you're using Hugh Jackman for your Isur who was banished from Sultros for being too gosh darn awesome, I will judge you. If you're posting three lines to my one thousand word post, I will judge you. Anime avatars are just one of the many cosmetic factors that can affect how people view you, and from what I'd read and seen, it would seem the general opinion of them isn't high. It isn't necessarily low, but if you want to be taken seriously off the bat, it looks like anime is out.
And, really, that's the endgame, isn't it? I'd hope we all want to have interesting, impressive characters who are reflections of the roles, ideas, and natures they embody. We want people to know we've spent time crafting them, thought molding them into who they are. No. You don't have to conform to what people generally think or are naturally inclined to support. You can have an anime avatar. You can make a starting assassin. You can have an Akalak who's two halfs are literally good and evil. These are your choices, your decisions, and you can make them awesome. But there's something that people always seem to forget: You're not as unique as you think you are. These things have been done by many many people before you. Anime faces have been used, and they have been abused time and time again. Same with anything else that has a bad rap. You can reclaim it, you can change it, you can show people that you're actually the illest assassin ever with a deep and meaningful backstory. You can play up the good vs. evil Akalak and make him a tormented or beautiful individual with a rich stretch of wonderful character development. You can bring your anime face to life through the well thought out, intricate plots and realistic reactions and actions to those plots.
But when it comes down to it, you have something to prove. You're not starting out on even footing. You have a hill, a mountain, a world, to conquer before you are something that people look at and think, "Dang that's a cool PC". So, ultimately, people are entitled to their opinions. You should do what you think is best and what you want to do, because nothing sucks more than trying to write for a character you don't like or don't want. But you should also take into account the opinions of others. This is a community, not a place where everyone is required to give you smiles and pat you on the back. You will get out what you put in. And you know? Mizahar isn't for everything. It isn't. If you can't accept that Ichigo doesn't work in Mizahar or that kawaii-desu moshi-moshi baby doll would probably have died as a toddler for being so gosh darn vapid, you should probably go play on an anime site. It's not because people don't want you, or can't handle what you're doing, but the very nature of Mizahar rejects the character.
That was a super long tangent. Basically: I think anime avatars are dumb. I think you put yourself at a disadvantage by choosing something like that from the start, and it's just going to make your life that much more complicated.
On that last note that Cae made about templates and such: I judge poor artistic choices. If you can't make a boxcode, that's fine, just use the regular forum text because it's actually not that bad. If you have to make a code, do a frame pic with a readable font and pleasing colors. If you do something that looks awful, and your excuse is "I don't know what I'm doing" no. No no no. Black and white is crisp. "But it's so boring" You don't know what you're doing, remember? There are plenty of people who are happy to make codes. There are also plenty of ways to make a basic, nice looking code. It's the same thing as it is with anything else, if you're trying to put on a tutu when your only other options are a business casual outfit and going naked, please just put on the business casual because it will make things easier for everyone. And if you're going to put on a tutu? Be ready. You're not wrong, but there are going to be people who look at you and think, "Wtf tutu."
#rantover
I've been reading this thread for awhile, and I've been loving it. I love to judge things. I love to sit down with my cup of orange juice and munchy crackers and read about everyone's crazy ol' opinions and laugh and agree and disagree and shake my head at how much I think someone might be wrong or right. It's fun. It's even more fun to let my firm grip on being amiable and friendly to people slip in cases like this and judge the crap out of people I disagree with. It's relaxing to be like, "Wow, that was sucha dumb thing to say" or "Holy moley, so-and-so has no idea how bigoted/hypocritical they seemed just then" rather than to go through the exhausting process of forcing my brain in the empathy mode to be like "I understand both parts of this argument and everyone is presenting valid arguments". But I definitely don't send nasty PMs letting people know how stupid or foolish they are. I have my laugh, I might think a little less or a little more of someone, but in the end it's all just opinion, and the beauty of opinion is it's wholly subjective. Even those people who want to be like, "My opinion is the greatest opinion and the only opinion and all those who disagree are wrong" that's their opinion. Neato.
Mini-rant over. I love anime. I watch it more than probably any other form of visual media, and I get really invested into the stories, the characters, and the universes they portray. However, I just can't handle anime in a "realistic" setting. Anime is great because it plays on tropes and archetypes, taking them to the extreme, throwing in a dose of humor or severity, then taking a hammer and smashing everything so you either laugh like a hyena or bawl your eyes out because it's just so darn beautiful/tragic/horrifying/insert emotion eliciting word here. That kind of stuff doesn't work in the real world. Anime is like a super hyped version of reality, within its own reality it's great - within the reality of everything else... it's not.
When I see an anime avatar, I immediately form two thoughts: "What anime is that from because it looks like it could be awesome/terrible and I should see it/avoid it like the plague" and "Crossing this person off my list of potential partners". In my experiences outside of Miz (and within Miz), the people I have read that use anime avatars have writing styles/characters/general ways about them that I can't handle. Sometimes I can't handle the wild, flamboyant, and all around ridiculous hyper-nature of their PC. Sometimes I can't deal with the way something is always happening for no apparent reason, but it's imperative the random event come to conclusion or the world is going to end. Other times? I just don't like looking at the anime face. I think someone said they could turn anime images into real people in their minds. I applaud you. To me, anime characters aren't people. They're completely removed from my idea of what is real. If I see an anime face, my mind crafts an anime world, because that's where they belong.
Also, the way I create my own characters heavily affects how I view other people's PCs. I spend hours a day looking for the image of a person that I'm loosly forming in my head. It's a ton of work, searching through this flood of images that may or may not be pornographic or so photoshopped the people look liked dolls, but eventually I find what I'm looking for. I honestly don't get how anyone could use an image for their character that they don't view accurately represents their character. I'm pretty sure that happens though, and if I see a picture for a person that doesn't fit in my head, I just shrug and assume they know their own character better then I've been able to glean from the CS. But when someone uses an anime avatar, it's the same thing. In my mind, they've chosen that specific avatar because that is how they view their character, and that is something I can't write with.
I'm wrong a lot. Sometimes, there will be anime avatars that have interesting characters. Sometimes, there will be people with really cool real life models who suck on the muck of a third grader's literary booties. Judging things by their cover and acting on those judgments definitely means that there are good people I'll miss out on eventually. When that happens, I don't have an issue swallowing my pride and thinking, "Well gee willikers, I was wrong about them!" But. Butty but but but. The majority of the time? My intuition is sound. It helps me. It lets me look at something and decide "Yes, I'm going to put in the time to make an effort with this person" or "No. Just no."
And the beauty of this? I don't say anything to them. Is that being a coward or untrue to myself because I'm not sharing my opinions 100% of the time? Absolutely not. I'm using my brain to make my own choices. If those choices are wrong? I have the leeway to go back, admit I was wrong to myself, and start fresh with the person writing. If that person doesn't want to write with em because I turned them down before, then I don't want to write with them because they can't get over their own petty reasons. Every time you interact with someone you leave an impression. Those impressions are taken into account. In my mind, using an anime avatar is like showing up to an interview for a business firm wearing a tutu and horse head mask. You might qualified. You might be over qualified. But I will take one look at you, shake my head, and see the next person because that's how I choose to run my business.
Also? If you write poorly or are an uninteresting writer on your CS, that's way worse. From what people have said, I feel like they probably agree with that. Avatars aren't the be all end all, but a bad avatar is definitely a good way to turn people away from your CS. Bad photo edits, popular celebrities, really crummy CGI, even avatars that are "loose" depictions of your character (the model has brown hair and blue eyes while the character has blonde hair and green eyes) are all just as bad as an anime avatar, but for different reasons. Mizahar is a pretty amazing place with a bunch of amazing writers, but that's the thing. People want to write with those amazing writers. They don't want to write with someone who's going to waste their time, because that's the currency we spend here. Time. And if I can weed out people I know are going to waste my time from the beginning, I'm going to do that so I can dedicate my time to people who are also going to invest in me.
That's my take on things. I get riled up when I talk about stuff I have strong opinions about, so if I was offensive to anyone please just know that I probably do think you suck, but my opinions of you are pretty fluid. There's this weird thing (and I suppose it's probably more of a good thing than a bad thing) where people seem to have this idea that they deserve equal opportunities in terms of writing partners.
Mizahar is a writing site. Mizahar is also a pretty darn serious game. If you think that people should judge you solely off of your writing, I shake my head at you - unless you really can maintain a small enough OOC presence to achieve that, then more power to you. Your avatar, your boxcodes, your font choices, and the way you conduct yourself outside of the main roleplaying forums all heavily affect how people view you. If you're using bright pink font on a puke-grey background, I will judge you. If you're using Hugh Jackman for your Isur who was banished from Sultros for being too gosh darn awesome, I will judge you. If you're posting three lines to my one thousand word post, I will judge you. Anime avatars are just one of the many cosmetic factors that can affect how people view you, and from what I'd read and seen, it would seem the general opinion of them isn't high. It isn't necessarily low, but if you want to be taken seriously off the bat, it looks like anime is out.
And, really, that's the endgame, isn't it? I'd hope we all want to have interesting, impressive characters who are reflections of the roles, ideas, and natures they embody. We want people to know we've spent time crafting them, thought molding them into who they are. No. You don't have to conform to what people generally think or are naturally inclined to support. You can have an anime avatar. You can make a starting assassin. You can have an Akalak who's two halfs are literally good and evil. These are your choices, your decisions, and you can make them awesome. But there's something that people always seem to forget: You're not as unique as you think you are. These things have been done by many many people before you. Anime faces have been used, and they have been abused time and time again. Same with anything else that has a bad rap. You can reclaim it, you can change it, you can show people that you're actually the illest assassin ever with a deep and meaningful backstory. You can play up the good vs. evil Akalak and make him a tormented or beautiful individual with a rich stretch of wonderful character development. You can bring your anime face to life through the well thought out, intricate plots and realistic reactions and actions to those plots.
But when it comes down to it, you have something to prove. You're not starting out on even footing. You have a hill, a mountain, a world, to conquer before you are something that people look at and think, "Dang that's a cool PC". So, ultimately, people are entitled to their opinions. You should do what you think is best and what you want to do, because nothing sucks more than trying to write for a character you don't like or don't want. But you should also take into account the opinions of others. This is a community, not a place where everyone is required to give you smiles and pat you on the back. You will get out what you put in. And you know? Mizahar isn't for everything. It isn't. If you can't accept that Ichigo doesn't work in Mizahar or that kawaii-desu moshi-moshi baby doll would probably have died as a toddler for being so gosh darn vapid, you should probably go play on an anime site. It's not because people don't want you, or can't handle what you're doing, but the very nature of Mizahar rejects the character.
That was a super long tangent. Basically: I think anime avatars are dumb. I think you put yourself at a disadvantage by choosing something like that from the start, and it's just going to make your life that much more complicated.
On that last note that Cae made about templates and such: I judge poor artistic choices. If you can't make a boxcode, that's fine, just use the regular forum text because it's actually not that bad. If you have to make a code, do a frame pic with a readable font and pleasing colors. If you do something that looks awful, and your excuse is "I don't know what I'm doing" no. No no no. Black and white is crisp. "But it's so boring" You don't know what you're doing, remember? There are plenty of people who are happy to make codes. There are also plenty of ways to make a basic, nice looking code. It's the same thing as it is with anything else, if you're trying to put on a tutu when your only other options are a business casual outfit and going naked, please just put on the business casual because it will make things easier for everyone. And if you're going to put on a tutu? Be ready. You're not wrong, but there are going to be people who look at you and think, "Wtf tutu."
#rantover