Those faggots don't even know their own history, they can't pinpoint countries on a map even when they advocate for wars there, so why would you expect them to know someone else's history?
To be honest, the good thing about Yasuke being pushed alongside Ubisoft seemingly insulting the Japanese at EVERY opportunity is it's reinforced attitudes there to protect their culture.
There was concern that Japan was only 5 years behind the west but the amount of pushback they got, we never saw this in the west 5 years ago when their culture was being skinsuited by leftists so is an encouraging sign if resistance already to the indoctrination.
Makes me wonder if KoeiTecmo is starting to regret putting him in some of their games. Always dumbfounded me how they had him speak perfect English in Nioh, which didn't have multi-language voice tracks, just William and the villain speaking English with Hanzo switching between Japanese and broken English acting as a translator.
Eh, dunno about that. Nobunaga is pretty famous, as was Emperors Meiji and Hirohito. Akira Kurosawa was a very famous Japanese movie director. Osamu Tezuka is the grandfather of modern anime. I saw Musashi being mentioned, he was definitely a big deal, the samurai stereotype had to come from somewhere lol. Muramasa was a legendary blacksmith.
Technically Shinzo Abe, Satoru Iwata, and Akira Toriyama are historical figures now (Rest in Peace).
I would disagree. in my observation, most people aren't plugged into the Yasuke drama. Assassin's Creed in and of itself has no cultural relevance outside of the gaming sphere (and hardly any in the gaming sphere for that matter), so most normies don't even know about it.
Most people don't know anything about Japanese history hence why i said Yasuke is now the most well known figure from Japanese history (who doesn't even exist)
for sword nerds, the most famous person is probably musashi miyamoto.
for video game nerds, the most famous person is probably shigeru miyamoto.
for WWII history buffs, they might point to Yamamoto or Tojo
for those plugged into the culture war (which are not many), it's probably Yasuke. Yasuke is definitely one of the most talked about figures in the culture war, but I guarantee the larger public will forget his name a year from now. my speech-to-text does not even recognize the name.
Those faggots don't even know their own history, they can't pinpoint countries on a map even when they advocate for wars there, so why would you expect them to know someone else's history?
Well worded ;)
War is how Americans learn geography. The problem is, all they know about the area is the war.
To be honest, the good thing about Yasuke being pushed alongside Ubisoft seemingly insulting the Japanese at EVERY opportunity is it's reinforced attitudes there to protect their culture.
There was concern that Japan was only 5 years behind the west but the amount of pushback they got, we never saw this in the west 5 years ago when their culture was being skinsuited by leftists so is an encouraging sign if resistance already to the indoctrination.
Makes me wonder if KoeiTecmo is starting to regret putting him in some of their games. Always dumbfounded me how they had him speak perfect English in Nioh, which didn't have multi-language voice tracks, just William and the villain speaking English with Hanzo switching between Japanese and broken English acting as a translator.
He was legendary like other characters. Also, most of those games are made in Vietnam now.
Eh, dunno about that. Nobunaga is pretty famous, as was Emperors Meiji and Hirohito. Akira Kurosawa was a very famous Japanese movie director. Osamu Tezuka is the grandfather of modern anime. I saw Musashi being mentioned, he was definitely a big deal, the samurai stereotype had to come from somewhere lol. Muramasa was a legendary blacksmith.
Technically Shinzo Abe, Satoru Iwata, and Akira Toriyama are historical figures now (Rest in Peace).
Don't forget Super Mario.
I would disagree. in my observation, most people aren't plugged into the Yasuke drama. Assassin's Creed in and of itself has no cultural relevance outside of the gaming sphere (and hardly any in the gaming sphere for that matter), so most normies don't even know about it.
Most people don't know anything about Japanese history hence why i said Yasuke is now the most well known figure from Japanese history (who doesn't even exist)
depends on the person.
for sword nerds, the most famous person is probably musashi miyamoto.
for video game nerds, the most famous person is probably shigeru miyamoto.
for WWII history buffs, they might point to Yamamoto or Tojo
for those plugged into the culture war (which are not many), it's probably Yasuke. Yasuke is definitely one of the most talked about figures in the culture war, but I guarantee the larger public will forget his name a year from now. my speech-to-text does not even recognize the name.
Pretty sure Akira Toriyama dwarfs him in terms of recognition without even trying.