Just wanted to drop a quick note saying if you're creating this "unofficial" community identity because of traditions in anime culture, that's great and carry on. If you're doing it because you think you have to in order to comply with our trademark guidance on any social media pages you create, that's not exactly true. You can title pages something like "Anime & Manga Stack Exchange Community" and otherwise make it clear that the pages are not run by SE the company, and that's sufficient. — LauraFeb 20 at 18:50
@Mysticial I've opened a club on MAL called "~*Insignificant classmates & background characters*~ (IS~BG)". After I created it, some of the admin add some pieces to be longer.
Summary: 1. More interesting non-Q&A content (news, trailers, show-tell) to help generate discussion 2. Post interesting and memorable Q&A on FB, G+ 3. Figure out better community name
If we want to generate search traffic, it seems to me like the most searched things for any particular show are usually going to be the endings. Plot holes in the middle tend to get forgotten, but ones at the end are memorable. So we should make sure to have good questions and answers like that as possible.
So I'd suggest we look through all the anime with strange inexplicable endings and make some questions out of them. I'll try to do this based on my list, but others should do the same.
@Mysticial Yes, but that traffic will only last until the next episode airs. According to @Krazer the Clannad and Code Geass ending questions brought in lots of traffic long after the shows finished.
I'm not a fan of most of those questions. Good ones are hard to come up with, but it's very easy to come up with bad questions like that, and they'll still get lots of upvotes. Plus at some point we stop being a site about anime & manga Q&A and start being one about Japanese culture Q&A.
@chirale adding to what @Krazer said, we will debate here old question review, so if there is any particular ones you find where wrongly closed, raise the issue
@Krazer Potentially it's okay if it's not used as a general tag for all lolicon series, but only for questions specific to the genre. But it has the potential to be abused drastically, so I say probably not.
I always wondered how did the japanese got the idea of making animated productions including little girls and the obsession with them. When did it start? Was the idea originated in japan? Was it welcomed by the actual anime public?
@JNat I actually think making it more specific is better. Don't forget that the tag is appended to the title. So if it's specific, it'll push them higher up on Google.
one-piece's Luffy, naruto's Naruto, fairy-tail's Natsu, reborn's Tsuna, dragonball's Goku are all showed to be simple-minded and foolish. Why is it so common to depict the lead protagonist to be so stupid?
Crazy. I was with you until the "they may crucial to bring in users" bit. Puhleeze... This site will have no trouble attracting an early audience. The worst thing that can happen here is drive towards "we'll worry about quality later." A new site is evaluated for having a strong start with quality content, much much much much much much more so than having the largest possible audience. If these questions will harm the site long-term, don't allow them. You're here to build a strong foundation now... for the long run. Don't fall for these games just to pump up your numbers — bad idea. — Robert CartainoDec 13 '12 at 0:07
@chirale Honestly I can't disagree with that more. I think if anything we have too many out-of-universe questions. I counted 10 on the main page right now.
Industry questions are good but unsustainable IMO. There's only so much info that's available, and we don't want very technical questions. We haven't had as much difficulty so far because we're still small, but as we expand it'll be harder and harder to sustain a proportional amount of content of this type without duplicating a lot of it.
In shoujo anime and manga such as Vampire Knight, Special A, and Kaichou wa Maid-sama, the male love interests (or Zero in the case of Vampire Knight) are shown to be top scorers in the class. Is there a known reason for this to be so common?
@chirale In America, gender targeted television is fairly concrete. Lifetime and Oxygen are stations specifically for women, so most men will avoid those channels like the plague. But Japan, where cute reigns supreme, the division tends to be more ambiguous.
E.g., ichigo mashimaro is a slice of life anime featuring four very cute little girls, yet it’s seinen. azumanga daioh, another cute anime starring a bunch of high school girls, is also a seinen. Does that mean only men aged 15-40 should watch these shows?
> In contrast to action-oriented shonen (boys’) manga, shojo manga ruminate on themes of emotion, love, identity, and responsibility that often play out internally. That said, shojo manga are by no means just for girls. Shojo stories are about aspects of life that concern everyone—boys and girls, old and young.
@chirale How is it ambiguous? It's a question about the demographic group. Whether or not any particular series falls in that demographic is irrelevant for all practical purposes.
Shadow Star, known in Japan as , which comes from the abbreviation of , is the name of a Japanese manga and of the anime series which was based on the manga. The series was created by Mohiro Kitoh and was originally serialized in the magazine Afternoon. When asked about the manga, Mohiro Kitoh stated that he had about 80% of the entire story planned out from the beginning. When he was asked about the anime series, he stated he was grateful it was made. In the United States, it was licensed by Dark Horse and serialized in Super Manga Blast!
The 13-episode anime adaptation was broadc...
the style of that work is something that can be wrongly associated to younger demographics, but the series target seinen and then the publisher in the US have to stop publishing it.
@JNat Okay, I think we've reached a consensus to do nothing for now on genre tags, but implement them in the future if they get large enough to be useful for categorization.
It just means that it always has to be clarified in the post itself. So, someone who is looking for info on X continuity (or is in an expert in X continuity only) will have to read the post rather than rely on the tags.
@Eric SAC is rather different from the original GitS. There is really probably more different than similar. By contrast, the differences between FMA and Brotherhood could be summarized nicely in a single post.
@LoganM But they are markedly different in terms of a question. "What is Wrath's role? fullmetal-alchemist" is (aside from being too broad) impossible to answer without knowing which continuity.
@Eric I don't think there will be that many cases of this. It's much more likely to just be one more tag people have to ignore than to be useful for any sort of classification.
If it's less than half of them, the added work in having an extra tag doesn't seem worth it to me. It's one more tag everyone has to favorite/ignore, and it makes it more difficult when you're asking the question to decide how to tag it.
The only cases I'd advise separate tags are when you'd be more interested in asking "What are the similarities/relations between X and Y continuities?" rather than "What are the differences between X and Y continuities?"
@JNat I think so. Other people should be allowed to share their opinions regarding this and we should at least state that there wasn't any conclusion though we made some decisions.
After some discussion in our sixth Chat Cast on how to use our Facebook and Google+ community pages, we've reached the following conclusion:
We should try to post more interesting non-Q&A content (news, trailers, show and tell, etc.) to help generate discussion and traffic to the site. Make...