2019-06-26, 20:39 | Link #842 |
Born to ship
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Texas
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I don't know. He seems to at least realize it works like a game. It's just a real game world, where things follow a fair amount of game logic but things still have consequences. He doesn't seem to have any problem grasping this far as I see. He just keeps saying it's real to try and get through to the others the sort of weight their actions have.
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2019-06-26, 22:33 | Link #843 | ||
Senior Member
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Quote:
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2019-07-02, 21:30 | Link #846 |
Born to ship
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Texas
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My guess would be just overall privacy. They want to keep everything a secret until they've decided to reveal their identity. Perhaps they have another job (I've heard private LN authors might keep a separate job), which may become difficult if they're known to be spending so much time writing.
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2019-07-03, 00:18 | Link #847 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Hamburg, Germany
Age: 49
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The strange practice I've seen Japanese writers exercise of doing interviews with masks on seems to be a Japanese thing. I don't know, maybe obsessive otaku will otaku and bad stuff has happened in the past?
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2019-07-04, 15:58 | Link #852 |
Born to ship
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Texas
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Yeah. Kind of figures it'd be a fairly-known setup considering how there's no surprise in Eromanga Sensei to first seeing the artist and "he" has a mask on online. If that series had been written in America I imagine that spot where the hero pulls up the livestream and sees the hoodie and mask would've been followed by a fair degree of surprise and confusion at the oddity, not a simple "oh so this's Eromanga-sensei is it".
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Tags |
isekai, traumatized protagonist |
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