Forum - View topicAnswerman - Are There More Anime Remakes And Sequels These Days?
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AmpersandsUnited
Posts: 633 |
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The Pocket Monsters anime owes its popularity to doing this. If you just made an anime based on the game events it would only be 13 episodes long, but the anime expands a generation of the game to over 100 episodes by adding in new characters, storylines, and fleshing the world out much more in-depth. |
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anime_layer
Posts: 46 |
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I did a quick comparison of 1998 and 2018 on Twitter some time ago:
https://twitter.com/sttz/status/1014577644430651398 I looked at wether series where new or continuing, where continuing could mean it's a sequel, spin-off, remake or whatever. While continuing series did increase by 18%, new series actually increased much more by 58%. Put another way, the amount of continuing series decreased by 8 percentage points from 63% to 55%. This would suggest that, contrary to the question, we get less remakes and sequels today, even with series becoming shorter and being split cour more often. I would suggest the sentiment has a different source, the dramatic decline of original anime vs adaptations. In 1998, 34% of all anime where original, in 2018 only 13%. Today, we get a lot more adaptations and that may lead to the impression that we also get more remakes and sequels. As an aside, interestingly, the percentage of novel adaptations has been stable (17% to 16%) but game adaptations have increased significantly (7% to 18%). So much for the light novel adaptation boom (though I didn't check if there was a shift from novels to light novels), it's more of a game adaptation and adaptation boom in general (total number of novel adaptations still went up 71% - it's just that all other adaptations went up as well). |
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Sakagami Tomoyo
Posts: 940 Location: Melbourne, VIC, Australia |
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The transition to all digital painting didn't finish until the 10s. (Sazae-san in 2013, to be specific.) And there were definitely new productions in at least 01-02 that were wholly or primary cel animated. |
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Just Passing Through
Posts: 277 |
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Thanks for crunching some numbers. It makes food for thought.... |
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Brack
Posts: 281 Location: UK |
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Some of those 1998 original anime (as per MAL and those numbers), they aren't that original. For example:
Burn Up Excess - Sequel / Remake All Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku and All Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku DASH! - Sequel/Remake/Spin-Off Mahou no Stage Fancy Lala - Remake in name only, and part of Pierrot Magical Girl franchise. Alice SOS - inspired by Alice in Wonderland Sentimental Journey - spin off the Sentimental Graffiti games. YAT Anshin! Uchuu Ryokou 2 - sequel. Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040 - Remake. St. Luminous Mission High School - Debuted as a radio programme earlier in the year. The difference to today is mainly the sources they were going to, initially a lot of previously successful OAVs got TV versions, and in how deep the sequels got. |
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anime_layer
Posts: 46 |
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I used MAL as source for what was airing and categorized all titles by hand. I didn't want to go by a gut feeling and therefore did this cursory comparison. There are definitely inaccuracies in the data and arguments could be had where some series fall exactly but I believe the overall conclusion is accurate. Regarding your examples: Maybe it wasn't clear enough but I compared the spring seasons of 1998 and 2018. El Hazard, Nuku Nuku and Bubblegum Crisis aired in the winter or fall seasons. I did count Sentimental Journey as a game adaptation and both Burn Up Excess and YAT Anshin! Uchuu Ryokou 2 as sequels. I was comparing adapations vs originals and sequels are not adaptations, therefore I counted them as originals (but as continuing series). Alice SOS, St. Luminous and Fancy Lala are nitpicks. Everything is inspired by something else and there are no true originals, Alice SOS is sufficiently different from Alice in Wonderland to be counted as an original. In spring 2018 I also counted Megalo Box as an original, even if it's inspired by Ashita no Joe. St. Luminous is a bit trickier and could maybe be counted as a cross-media franchise. However, I would see the radio play more as a preview - saying the anime was adapted from the radio play probably doesn't reflect the realities of the production. I did count Fancy Lala as an original. I didn't see the OVA and so can't say much about the similarities but the fact that it's part of the Pierrot magical girls series does not make it an adaptation. |
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