I don't have paid twitter, but if we want to defend palworld, someone has to @grummz and encourage him to ask people to contact nintendo investors.
Nintendo is publicly traded. If dozens of their biggest shareholders start hearing directly from the public that this makes Nintendo look like a villain, and will result in fans swearing off the brand? That's going to get investors involved in telling Nintendo it might be an unwise move to throw such might behind a bruised ego.
"Contact the investors"
"Contact the advertisers"
This is how groups like media matters and SPLC / ADF get things done. We need to wise up. Bitching directly to nintendo isn't going to accomplish anything. Getting the bag-holders riled up will.
Someone with a decent following and twitter blue please @Grummz. Post a link here. I'll like and re-tweet.
someone has to @grummz and encourage him to ask people to contact nintendo investors
Extremely difficult to do when the investors only read and speak Japanese, a language that Google Translate badly butchers on the best of days. One would either need to hire the most dedicated of überweebs, or ideally track down a Japanese person who is fluent in both English and Japanese, in order to properly convey the message they want to send.
Aren't we assuming American's aren't owning the Nintendo stock? and I am sure rich people earning large stakes can afford interpreters.
Our dollar is almost three times their dollar. We can definitely out-buy them at their own stock. We just have to rattle their English speaking sugar daddies.
Yes, because Nintendo isn't listed on the NASDAQ (US stock market), they are listed on the Japan Exchange Group (Japanese stock market). Stemming from that, one could also assume that you need to be not only fluent in the language, but also their laws which can be either stricter or different (or both) compared to dealing with the US stock market.
Furthermore, even if everything was on the up-and-up (read as: greased the right amount of palms), and you did manage to buy enough stock to get in on their investors' meetings, the chances are quite high that you would never get to speak at all because they would rather commit seppuku than let 馬鹿外人 speak on their own turf.
Alright, alternatively, isn't education a standard part of both primary and secondary education in Japan?
I'm not saying all are fluent, but there is probably at least a couple who read twitter and engage with twitter. Who can be @'d, and we have to hope we scare that investor enough to get him to talk to other nintendo investors, and start a buzz amongst themselves.
Is there actual harm in trying? Or are we just lay down and take it bottom bitches?
I don't have paid twitter, but if we want to defend palworld, someone has to @grummz and encourage him to ask people to contact nintendo investors.
Nintendo is publicly traded. If dozens of their biggest shareholders start hearing directly from the public that this makes Nintendo look like a villain, and will result in fans swearing off the brand? That's going to get investors involved in telling Nintendo it might be an unwise move to throw such might behind a bruised ego.
"Contact the investors" "Contact the advertisers"
This is how groups like media matters and SPLC / ADF get things done. We need to wise up. Bitching directly to nintendo isn't going to accomplish anything. Getting the bag-holders riled up will.
Someone with a decent following and twitter blue please @Grummz. Post a link here. I'll like and re-tweet.
Extremely difficult to do when the investors only read and speak Japanese, a language that Google Translate badly butchers on the best of days. One would either need to hire the most dedicated of überweebs, or ideally track down a Japanese person who is fluent in both English and Japanese, in order to properly convey the message they want to send.
Aren't we assuming American's aren't owning the Nintendo stock? and I am sure rich people earning large stakes can afford interpreters.
Our dollar is almost three times their dollar. We can definitely out-buy them at their own stock. We just have to rattle their English speaking sugar daddies.
Yes, because Nintendo isn't listed on the NASDAQ (US stock market), they are listed on the Japan Exchange Group (Japanese stock market). Stemming from that, one could also assume that you need to be not only fluent in the language, but also their laws which can be either stricter or different (or both) compared to dealing with the US stock market.
Furthermore, even if everything was on the up-and-up (read as: greased the right amount of palms), and you did manage to buy enough stock to get in on their investors' meetings, the chances are quite high that you would never get to speak at all because they would rather commit seppuku than let 馬鹿外人 speak on their own turf.
Alright, alternatively, isn't education a standard part of both primary and secondary education in Japan?
I'm not saying all are fluent, but there is probably at least a couple who read twitter and engage with twitter. Who can be @'d, and we have to hope we scare that investor enough to get him to talk to other nintendo investors, and start a buzz amongst themselves.
Is there actual harm in trying? Or are we just lay down and take it bottom bitches?