The popular discussion forum Reddit has become the scene
of a lively debate over the widespread aversion to spoilers within the
community from anime. It all started with an intriguing comment that
triggered a series of opinions and reflections.
The user expressed: “Personally, I have never had spoilers ruin my experience with any media. For me, even if I know where the journey ends, what matters is how the author of the story guides me to the end, so it doesn't affect my enjoyment. In fact, sometimes spoilers make me more excited to see how the story develops. Of course, I know a lot of people who are very cautious about spoilers, and I try not to spoil the experience for them if they don't want to. However, not yet I've heard no one give a specific reason for how spoilers hurt your enjoyment. So I wonder why people are so afraid of spoilers. I want to try to understand how it affects your enjoyment“.
This provocative comment sparked an active discussion among
Reddit users, each sharing their perspectives on the topic. Some agreed
that anticipation and surprise are crucial elements to fully enjoying a story,
while others argued that knowing certain details beforehand does not ruin your
experience.
What's interesting is that many users pointed out that
spoiler aversion is especially prominent in the anime realm. This is
largely because adaptations of manga or light novels that have already been in
circulation for a while become easy material to spoil for those already
familiar with the story. original story. Those who only watch the
animated version, often called “anime-only,” are in a vulnerable position, as
spoilers can come from virtually anywhere.
- «Eliminates
the initial reaction of seeing something for the first time. I can't be
surprised by a plot development because I knew it was going to happen. For
me, that's a big blow to my enjoyment of the series."
- «Because
people like to be surprised, since life itself is predictable as hell».
- «One
of the first animes that was spoiled for me was Cowboy Bebop, and I
watched it only 5 years later, this year. I didn't like it very much,
although the spoiler was only about the ending. Your Lie in April – a week
before the finale, the entire internet was flooded with spoilers, I didn't
feel anything because I already knew the ending. Madoka Magica: they
revealed to me the true nature of the series and a death, but I enjoyed it
a lot, it is my favorite anime».
- «Ruin
is a very strong word, one that I wouldn't use unless the plot relies
heavily on a plot twist or revelation. However, spoilers are distracting
and can detract from the experience as you begin to view the media through
the spoiler lens. You can no longer just watch what is happening on the screen
and immerse yourself in it. You start to anticipate how everything that
happens on screen will fit with the spoiler. Your mind says, “That doesn't
add up, so it's a distraction,” or “This doesn't end like that, so it's
too early for anything serious to happen to these characters.” They take
you off the rollercoaster of emotions and you only focus on how things get
to the known end result».
- «It
totally depends on how big the spoiler is».
- «Like
80 percent of experts, I avoid anime openings. When I look at something, I
want to be surprised by the development, imagine the future and be wrong».
- «I
find that people pointing out spoilers are more annoying. I'm referring to
those bitches that point out the spoilers in the opening, which one being
anime-only wouldn't even notice. Thank goodness I went blind with Attack
on Titan and caught up on the manga before the second season aired. And
frankly, episode discussions aren't the worst spoiler offenders (at least
if you're like me who visits threads after a day or two, since spoilers
are already locked and discussions are dead by then), jokes in memes and
completely unrelated threads are».
- «Two
reasons make me avoid spoilers/trailers/synopsis: The experience that a
movie/anime will give you can be partially based on the surprise that a
key event causes you. For example, your first viewing of will be less
interesting if you already know its ending. And it won't be as enjoyable
as a second or third viewing, since you don't know the movie well enough
to appreciate it on a second viewing. The second reason is that when I
know some key event is going to happen, or if I've already seen a scene, I
find myself waiting for that key event or scene. And during that time, I
won't really be in the series, and I won't appreciate it as much as I
could.
- «Annihilates
any sense of suspense and/or mystery, paralyzes dramatic revelations, etc.
Not to mention the fact that a good portion of people fixate on it and end
up waiting for it to happen. (It also goes completely against the
experience the writer/director intended to convey to the audience, for
those who care about that sort of thing.) You can always go back to
analyze the series, but you can't blindly rewatch it, so people (rightly)
feel like they've been robbed of a potential experience when something is
spoiled. And while it's true that you can appreciate how something was
done once you know it, that's very different from enjoying it.
- «As
an example, the punch line of this joke is that “Juan” and “Amal” sound
like “one” and “all” and, therefore, can be used in the phrase “if you've
seen one, you've seen them all,” used humorously to downplay an emotional
moment: A woman has twins and gives them up for adoption. One goes to a
family in Egypt and his name is Amal. The other goes to Spain and his name
is Juan. Years later, Juan sends a photo of himself to his mother. Upon
receiving it, she tells her husband that she would also like to have a
photo of Amal. Her husband responds: “But they are twins. If you have seen
Juan, you have seen Amal.” You can see the cleverness of the joke, but it
probably wasn't very funny. Or how flaccid and grossly overacted the big
winner's announcement on a reality show is when you don't give a shit
about the results (because you just caught the end of the episode tuning
in to whatever's next or something like that)».
- «I
was spoiled about the nature of the armored and colossal titan from
Shingeki no Kyojin. When the real reveal was made and people were in “OMG
mode” I was like “okay, they finally said it now let's move on to the fight.”
In the case of Bleach, I planned to read the manga after the anime ended,
then they spoiled me about Unohana and Zaraki, now several years later I
still haven't started reading the manga and I don't plan to read it. That
should make my stance on spoilers clear.”
- «I
quite dislike spoilers, although it depends on the type of series and what
the spoiler actually is: minor things or spoilers for episodic series
don't bother me much . Unfortunately, I have a very good memory for
useless things, so if something is spoiled (no matter how unimportant), I
will still remember it even if I see, read or play it only years later. My
biggest problem with spoilers is that when I watch the show, I think about
the spoiler more than the rest of the show. I find myself constantly
thinking, “Okay, how does the spoiler foreshadow this?” instead of drawing
my own conclusions. Instead of choosing from an ocean of possibilities and
thinking about the most plausible ones, now I only think about how what is
happening links to the only certain outcome. It's a different viewing
experience, and I enjoy it less."
- «Spoilers
don't have to ruin the experience, but they don't have to ruin it for
people either. I wholeheartedly believe that people who give spoilers
without warning are assholes. Seriously, why would you want to mess
something up for someone and have it be okay with you?.”
- «Once
you've been spoiled, you forever lose the chance to be surprised in the
way the author intended, and in return you gain nothing more than what it
could also give you. a new viewing. I realize that in many cases the way a
twist is constructed is more interesting than the twist itself, but
there's always time to remember all the juicy foreshadowing once you've
finished watching the series. They ruined Madoka Magica for me. It's still
my favorite anime because of how shocking it is, but I can't help but
think that the spoilers stole part of the experience. Then I saw the movie
completely blind, and its ending, although I think it is inferior to that
of the series, impacted me much more».
- «For
me, it is when something is revealed to me that takes away my desire to
see/read. Things like which girl the MC ends up with at the end of a harem
series (when that series has little else going for it than the continuous
cycle of baiting one girl after another), or who the murderer is in a
detective story. I tend to like them less the shorter a work is, because
they reveal more. However, I generally hardly consider the background of
the characters or the world to be spoilers, unless the main plot of the
work focuses on them enough to include them in the "mystery"
category».
- «Not
so. In any case, it improves my experience, since I start to analyze
everything that foreshadows what is going to happen. I can usually catch the
foreshadowing of a certain outcome long before it's revealed, so spoilers
don't mean much to me. I like the journey, not the outcome. For example, I
continued to enjoy Your Lie in April even though I knew from episode 1 or
2 what the outcome was going to be. The first three minutes of Madoka
Magica set the tone for the series, and I wasn't surprised by any shift in
tone as it was established from the beginning. Although Madoka Magica was
spoiled for me, I can't say for sure, but I liked it more when I saw it
again».
- «I
guess that lessens the surprise factor. I like to discover things as I go.
That doesn't mean I can't be surprised even if I know certain things
beforehand. I started watching the Zombieland Saga a few days ago, so I
already knew the main twists from the first episode, but the beginning
made me jump... Although I'm sure I would have been even more stunned if I
had gone in completely blind ».
- «Like
others have said, I think this depends entirely on one's personal
preferences. I love puzzles and solving things on my own. And in general,
I don't like stories that are too predictable. That's why I find it
difficult to watch simple action and romance shows, but I love comedy and
thrillers, because I'm constantly trying to figure out what happens next.
Another important part is that I feel like a show is really good only if
it's rewatchable. So hopefully going blind will give me a good mental
workout, and watching it again will allow me to see things I missed the
first time and enjoy them in the right context. Shows like Monogatari are
top-notch because I constantly find new things (foreshadowing and
interesting details) even after rewatching them multiple times.”
- «Spoilers
adjust your expectations of a show. As you say, it's very much about
guiding you down a path, but with spoilers it sometimes feels like the
path is already lit rather than full of possibilities. If the story being
told depends on existing possibilities, it is “ruined.” Now you wait for
the only path instead of experiencing the journey.”
Fuente: Reddit