Yes at least three regulars commenters, plus a few lurkers that pop up in these threads from time to time. If you're asking whether the subtitles are correct - yes they are somewhat more accurate than the dub, though some nuance is missing. You could translate the phrase to "independent woman", but I'd avoid it because that's a feminist catchphrase that these guys wouldn't use unless they were being sarcastic. I kinda disagree with nichegamer's conclusion too. This isn't another example of localizers gone wild. The dub may be worse but the dialogue is close enough to be evidence of the creeping preemptive feminization we had feared coming out of SEGA Japan.
But at least in the original they told him not to be sexist because it annoys people these days - not that he's wrong.
The dub may be worse but the dialogue is close enough to be evidence of the creeping preemptive feminization we had feared coming out of SEGA Japan.
That's the right answer. There was an article floating around half-kia where they state so
Behind the global success of Japanese video games lies a delicate task: appealing to overseas players whose expectations on issues such as sexism are increasingly influencing the content of major titles.
With the majority of sales for big games now outside Japan, everything from slang words to characters' costumes must be carefully considered for a global audience.
"appealing to overseas players whose expectations on issues such as sexism"
Their definition of "overseas players" always seems to translate to "woke westerners" . There's more to overseas audiences than just the West and there's more to the West than the woke .
Also "our things became popular as it is so lets change everything about it to suit some woke fucks."
Because woke bullshit offended olympics is the west's most notorious export.
Normal people buy the game if they want it, play it, and hopefully enjoy it.
The danger hair crowd is the one that organizes harassment campaigns and lives on twitter 24/7 to make creators miserable if they fail to cater exclusively to them.
Yes at least three regulars commenters, plus a few lurkers that pop up in these threads from time to time. If you're asking whether the subtitles are correct - yes they are somewhat more accurate than the dub, though some nuance is missing. You could translate the phrase to "independent woman", but I'd avoid it because that's a feminist catchphrase that these guys wouldn't use unless they were being sarcastic. I kinda disagree with nichegamer's conclusion too. This isn't another example of localizers gone wild. The dub may be worse but the dialogue is close enough to be evidence of the creeping preemptive feminization we had feared coming out of SEGA Japan.
But at least in the original they told him not to be sexist because it annoys people these days - not that he's wrong.
That's the right answer. There was an article floating around half-kia where they state so
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2024/01/25/digital/yakuza-translation-video-game-localization/
"appealing to overseas players whose expectations on issues such as sexism"
Their definition of "overseas players" always seems to translate to "woke westerners" . There's more to overseas audiences than just the West and there's more to the West than the woke .
Also "our things became popular as it is so lets change everything about it to suit some woke fucks."
Because woke bullshit offended olympics is the west's most notorious export.
Normal people buy the game if they want it, play it, and hopefully enjoy it.
The danger hair crowd is the one that organizes harassment campaigns and lives on twitter 24/7 to make creators miserable if they fail to cater exclusively to them.
It's more like, "Shitbag leftist activists". They are the sole people driving stuff like this.