Here’s my question, what makes you think you know what’s going on at all?
Here’s my question, what makes you think you know what’s going on at all?
Did she work on the port? No? Then there’s the problem of figuring out who should get credit.
Full Stop. I agreed she should be credited for voice direction, that’s the work she did that got carried over. I’m not exactly sure how or why she should be credited for all the other aspects that someone else worked on…
Turn of phrase. If she wasn’t working with the company when the PS4 version came out, then of course she didn’t do those things. So someone else had to.
That was kind of a reach dude.
See, that makes more sense. The thing is, XSEED’s format tends to credit each person for a single task involved, their big thing is to not elevate any single person above anyone else in the credits.
The issue here is that they had a policy to stop crediting people after they leave equally, apparently, probably to not…
Yeah, kinda my point. Even the titles of all these articles are misleading.
First... she didn’t work on the edited English text. I think you’re confusing her with Jessica Chavez. She was the translation editor.
Hatsuu was the voice director and a production coordinator (someone who handles logistics for the project).
So... if I were to set up the ESRB Ratings for a game, and it’s ported in a few years to a new platform and someone else does that work... I should get the credit for it despite not being around anymore?
Since it seems like overnight the poor girl has been miscredited for the game even by those covering what she did for it:
My main problem with this article and the comments is that there’s the repeated claim that XSEED removes employees from the credits after they leave the company. This is vague beyond words. The person in question is still in the credits of dozens of games XSEED worked on, so maybe a bit of clarity is needed? This was…
You make some vague statements here, XSEED has never removed someone from the credits on a game they worked on while working with the company. They don’t go back and edit those credits. Her name and Tom’s can still be found on dozens of their releases.
Except her credits for the PS3 / PC versions included QA, Marketing, ESRB Handling, and a bunch of other things someone else likely did for the PS4 version. Who’s supposed to get those credits exactly? Does the new person not deserve the credit for their work because someone else worked on a previous version?
Based on the reviews I’m seeing, old people don’t get the franchise and assume a video game movie is automatically bad. Making it plain once again how useless traditional movie reviews are now. Any review coming from a gaming site, geek movie reviewers, etc, are all glowing and positive.
She was in both trailers, obviously still his age.
Don’t really want to be contrarian but...
- The bag remains my gym bag to this day.
- The plush is sitting a foot away from me, it’s a great desktop ornament.
- The soundtrack CD, like all CDs, is easily ripped on iTunes and put on my phone in digital glory.
- I guess I can agree on the artbook, but it like all my others…
All this is interesting, yet astoundingly fails to address what I pointed out in your own claims that you haven’t seen any failure from Android units and using your “local tech guy” status as evidence of authority. You were given clear statistical data and a very logical reason why this supposition was wrong and ever…
Oh sweetie, my post was entirely relevant. It’s you actually trying to derail things by shifting the argument to being “off topic” just because you don’t want to address the point I’ve now made twice without you addressing it.
ROFL, when trolls try to pretend they were being genuine. It’s always so pathetically bad.
Honestly the effort you put into that deflection is amazing, I could simply have just argued that anyone who thinks that supporting thousands of hardware configurations over two or three at a time doesn’t lead to increased bug issues, hardware problems and general maintenance issues should probably stop pretending…
And this changes the fact that they make Tablets, Laptops, and TV Streaming Devices all of which can get this service... how?
https://www.tomsguide.com/us/android-device-failure-rate,news-25840.html
Yep, incredibly rare.