My preferred way to browse here is using All and blocking communities I don’t want to see. That way I get exposed to new things I wouldn’t seek out on my own (for example: British archaeology)

I accidentally blocked a community while trying to block a user and when I went to unblock it, I saw I had 1250 communities filtered. If I had to guess, 90% are either porn, sports, or anime.

What about you?

  • HubertManne
    link
    fedilink
    15 months ago

    Yes but I think thats a bit the same with all media. There is still tons of relatively recent anime that is really unique like attack on titan or To Your Eternity or even spy family.

    • @glimseOP
      link
      15 months ago

      I saw the first two seasons of AoT and liked it a lot. It has a well-defined art style. My only “complaint” is that I had a hard time telling a few characters apart

      Do you know the word/name for the art style I described in my other comment? I call it “kawaii anime” but I know that’s not right lol

      • HubertManne
        link
        fedilink
        25 months ago

        Im sorta a poser when it comes to fandom. I like stuff but I don’t have the obsession that drives really getting into a lot of details. So I totally don’t know are styles and such. Its sorta like museums. I like to go and I like what I like but I don’t necessarily have great depth of knowledge of art style or periods or such. Its only due to memes that I know the getting sucked into a fantasy world has a name and I can’t even recall that atm. I mean I could google it right now but I just don’t care much that the particular term is X but if someone mentions it in a convo I will likely remember that what they are talking about with context clues. im thinking its like ikea with an s somewhere and i or something.

        • @glimseOP
          link
          15 months ago

          IKEA anime actually works really well for what I’m describing lol

          Not necessarily bad but it is bland and unoriginal. The main difference for this analogy is that I wouldn’t consider IKEA to be childlike