So ArcSys fighting games will dominate now!
2014 year of anime believe!
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Marn provides the best gifs
Just Arc System Works though.
Sega doesn't allow for any videos, so no Aquapazza, The King of Fighters, or Persona.
Except that Aquapazza is published by Examu (with Aquaplus involved) and SNK handles the KoF games. Aside: anyone remember when MLG was filing ContentID claims on KoFXIII matches back when XIII was being run at MLG?Just Arc System Works/Aksys though.
Sega doesn't allow for any videos, so no Aquapazza, The King of Fighters, or Persona.
The console version of UNIBEL isn't happening in 2014; it got bumped due to French Bread's development with DBFC (to the point where I think you'll see DBFC on console in 2014 instead). You also forgot the PS3 port of AH3:Love Max!!!!! which was originally announced for fall 2014.
We still got French Bread. UNIBEL console release believe.
M2 is doing a follow-up to Koihime Musou too, I think.
If a video/streaming service sprung up with the intention of bridging the gap between publishers and players it might work out. Since, you know, the entire business plan of said site would depend on simultaneously letting its users monetize their broadcasts while also giving publishers control over their IP.I would hope someone would be able to step it up as well. Right now, Twitch seems like the logical contender, but I feel that they have a number of issues (both technical, and I don't mean just streaming, say, API for example and UX related) that they need to improve dramatically to make it close to providing what YouTube does in the VOD space.
That said, even if Twitch did rise up, that wouldn't stop companies that have claim to the original content from leveraging claims against whatever new service pops up and becomes the service du jour and taking the content down there.
If a company is going to be aggressive enough to protect their IP, they're not just going to go after it on YouTube, they're going to go after it everywhere that has a monetization model in place (which Twitch does).
Atlus published Aquapazza and The King of Fighters XIII in the US.
More like DailyMotion.Blip.tv and Vimeo here we come.
Blip.tv and Vimeo here we come.
Blip.tv and Vimeo here we come.
Sega purchased Atlus' parent company, Index holdings earlier this year. The acquisition included Atlus and Atlus USA
Yeah Vimeo is ass overall outside of some pretty good video quality.vimeo is no bueno.
So if I have explicit written permission from Examu to upload video footage from their games, but then someone like Sega or Aksys files a copyright infringement notice saying that I'm not allowed to show footage from a game they published, how should that be resolved? I guess it would come down to if/how broadcast rights are handled, if dictated at all in the original terms of the publishing contract (and how the hell would the average layperson know this?) What am I going to need in the future, permission from the publisher, developer, platform holder, players and my congressman in order to upload a match video?Sega purchased Atlus' parent company, Index holdings earlier this year. The acquisition included Atlus and Atlus USA
Yeah Vimeo is ass overall outside of some pretty good video quality.
Maybe someone can ressurect Stage6 for a brief stint of video nirvana again!
the thing is, going on tv is nothing like going on a stream. i was expecting it to be like a stream so i wasn't nervous at all and i'd done lots of preparation so i was pretty confident.
I'd count on dailymotion
The only conclusion I can come to is that our IP laws are vastly outdated in this day and age and need to be completely rewritten
from a policy standpoint I find it hard to believe that videogame publishers have suffered direct harm for the publication of videos using their content.
the thing is, going on tv is nothing like going on a stream. i was expecting it to be like a stream so i wasn't nervous at all and i'd done lots of preparation so i was pretty confident.
so first off, i'm not in the same room as the guy interviewing me. i'm in LA, he's in new york city. i find this out approximately 1 minute before they take me from the waiting room into this tiny room with a giant camera pointed at me and a green screen behind me. they fit an earpiece into my ear. then everyone else leaves the room. there's no feed of the program going on so i have no idea what i look like or what the show looks like. i try to straighten my tie but there's no mirror or anything so who knows how well that's working. my only connection to anything outside the room is through my earpiece, which is playing the audio feed of the show as broadcast from 3000 miles away. i'm just staring at a smiley face above the giant camera where they told me to look, listening in my earpiece for when someone might talk to me. that goes on for 10 minutes, me just sitting in that room by myself listening intently into this earpiece and staring intently into the smiley face because i have no idea when my segment is going to start. my mouth gets kinda foamy with dryness and i try to wipe it quickly because what if the camera turns on right when i'm doing that? it's not like they count you in or have someone who points to you that it's your turn to talk or anything. you're just hanging out waiting to try to snap into action.
so during this 10 minutes of being in this room with no connection to the outside world except through the audio feed in my ear, i try to go over in my mind what i want to say. mostly i can't seem to remember things. i try really hard to remember things and ignore the audio feed of the show's anchor babbling on about who knows what so that i can better remember. and i'm trying to maintain eye contact with this smiley face because the show could all of a sudden put me on air at any one of the next approximately 500 seconds.
so while working out my thoughts in my head and half ignoring the anchor, i suddenly hear, like, "...avid Graham. Thanks for joining us, David." and i scramble to say "Thanks for having me." and now i totally have to switch gears from waiting isolated in this booth to having an engaging conversation with one of the best thought of american tv journalists in front of i have no idea how many people about things i was interrupted in even thinking about!
so i went from being very confident to being very unsure of my info just like that. i tried to avoid saying names and really anything concrete because even though i kind of knew i had things right, i still was super worried that i didn't. as a result i ran everything i wanted to say through my brain at least once before letting it get to my mouth. hence lots of filler words like ums and uhs.
but anyway it was still really fun and i was stoked to do it and i'd love to do it again! i think i'd do much better now with a better understanding of how it goes. hope i get another chance.
If a company is going to be aggressive enough to protect their IP, they're not just going to go after it on YouTube, they're going to go after it everywhere that has a monetization model in place (which Twitch does).
the thing is, going on tv is nothing like going on a stream. i was expecting it to be like a stream so i wasn't nervous at all and i'd done lots of preparation so i was pretty confident.
so first off, i'm not in the same room as the guy interviewing me. i'm in LA, he's in new york city. i find this out approximately 1 minute before they take me from the waiting room into this tiny room with a giant camera pointed at me and a green screen behind me. they fit an earpiece into my ear. then everyone else leaves the room. there's no feed of the program going on so i have no idea what i look like or what the show looks like. i try to straighten my tie but there's no mirror or anything so who knows how well that's working. my only connection to anything outside the room is through my earpiece, which is playing the audio feed of the show as broadcast from 3000 miles away. i'm just staring at a smiley face above the giant camera where they told me to look, listening in my earpiece for when someone might talk to me. that goes on for 10 minutes, me just sitting in that room by myself listening intently into this earpiece and staring intently into the smiley face because i have no idea when my segment is going to start. my mouth gets kinda foamy with dryness and i try to wipe it quickly because what if the camera turns on right when i'm doing that? it's not like they count you in or have someone who points to you that it's your turn to talk or anything. you're just hanging out waiting to try to snap into action.
so during this 10 minutes of being in this room with no connection to the outside world except through the audio feed in my ear, i try to go over in my mind what i want to say. mostly i can't seem to remember things. i try really hard to remember things and ignore the audio feed of the show's anchor babbling on about who knows what so that i can better remember. and i'm trying to maintain eye contact with this smiley face because the show could all of a sudden put me on air at any one of the next approximately 500 seconds.
so while working out my thoughts in my head and half ignoring the anchor, i suddenly hear, like, "...avid Graham. Thanks for joining us, David." and i scramble to say "Thanks for having me." and now i totally have to switch gears from waiting isolated in this booth to having an engaging conversation with one of the best thought of american tv journalists in front of i have no idea how many people about things i was interrupted in even thinking about!
so i went from being very confident to being very unsure of my info just like that. i tried to avoid saying names and really anything concrete because even though i kind of knew i had things right, i still was super worried that i didn't. as a result i ran everything i wanted to say through my brain at least once before letting it get to my mouth. hence lots of filler words like ums and uhs.
but anyway it was still really fun and i was stoked to do it and i'd love to do it again! i think i'd do much better now with a better understanding of how it goes. hope i get another chance.
the thing is, going on tv is nothing like going on a stream. i was expecting it to be like a stream so i wasn't nervous at all and i'd done lots of preparation so i was pretty confident.
...
Damn, nerves even getting to the best.
Overall though I think you did really great, the segment was great. I'm not sure if you answered, but how did they contact you about this?
Not sure if this is the case still but at some point I believe DailyMotion was the second biggest video site next to YT.I was going to nominate Dailymotion as well. Great place for uploading video. When you get tired of watching match videos, their are plenty of other "interesting" videos to watch to keep yourself entertained.
Al-Jazeera Jitters.
Probably entry fees wavedWhat do winners of the DTN qualifier get? Better seeding?
@Capcom_Unity: YouTubers: Pls let us know if you've had videos flagged today. These may be illegitimate flags not instigated by us. We are investigating.
Haha, Youtube don't care. Suspend them all and let God sort it out.Capcom response to flags on Youtube.
They do care if others are trying to claim their copyrights/drive traffic to their own videos.Haha, Youtube don't care.
Atlus published Aquapazza and The King of Fighters XIII in the US.
First round match-ups for SfxT were revealed
Infiltration (Jin, Alisa) vs. TheZombieDriver (Hwoarang, Nina)
Alex Valle (Yoshimitsu, Lars) vs. Tampa Bison (M. Bison, Rolento)
NuckleDu (Guile, Zangief) vs. Sethlolol (Law, Kuma)
Justin Wong (Hwoarang, Chun-Li) vs. Ramos (Vega, Cammy)
Capcom response to flags on Youtube.
Infiltration, TampaBison, Seth, Justin, imo.
Seth/Infiltration are almost certainly on opposite sides of the final bracket.
Facebook page just says the percentage of the pot they get: https://www.facebook.com/events/632101413496044/?ref_dashboard_filter=upcomingWhat do winners of the DTN qualifier get? Better seeding?
Grand Finals: Infiltration vs Tampa Bison, and Tampa will win the whole thing. He's just too stronk.
BUT, with Infiltration only having SfxT to focus, he may have a good chance, but I don't think so