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Pros to being a Merchindise Driven Show?
There is absolutely no hiding that Kamen Rider...and Super Sentai... and just about every other Tokusatsu is a merchandise driven show and, for all the flaws that this entails, there has to be good things about being a show like that. To start us off, I'll say that I really enjoy the creative weapons and equipment that they have to come up with every year. Swords are a dime a dozen in just about any medium no matter where you are, so I'm pretty impressed with just how many different way they can make such a common weapon unique.
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Designs have to be more creative. When they reuse a motif (Beetles especially), they have to make them far different in comparison to past characters. It doesn't run into the problem a lot of action anime, especially shonen (Which, generally, aren't toy driven) has where everyone looks like everyone else.
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It does require the show to add in periodic upgrades which, when done well, can keep the show fresh. I love the Showa era, but there is a feeling of monotony that can develop with no changes to the hero's power set or fighting style for 35+ episodes.
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The shows have more creative touches with new forms etc.
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It gives us a lot of cool stuff to look at. I personally love seeing all of the different suits.
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What everyone else has said above with having cool stuff to look at and there is actually stuff I can buy. I hate how some shows have cool stuff that I want to buy but can't (*cough* Samurai Flamenco *cough*).
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I think having to work around the stipulations of being merchandise driven can cause some really impressive creativity. Figuring out how to implement the weird ideas the Bandai higher-ups want you do, when done well, tends to make the show very unique.
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From a story telling prospective, it forces the writers to find some kind of purpose for the toys they need to introduce and it's cool when they introduce something that helps expand the show's lore or mythos that they've created.
Easy example I can think of is the Lock Seeds. |
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Another pro I think would be the fan's ability to immerse themselves in that particular fiction. If you enjoy these shows so much then when you buy the toys it suddenly becomes your show. You act out scenes that your imagination creates on the fly just by holding an action figure & a deluxe role-play item. That's great for children & I believe it can expand their creativity as much as the adults that write the very shows.
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They don't have to rely on ratings to continue the show. I think in times of the internet and demographic change, that's a pretty important point.
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These shows, Kamen Rider and Sentai and especially Power Rangers, are built around ratings being almost secondary. They're nice. But the true driving force is toy sales. If you have massive ratings but poor toy sales the show can still be seen as a failure. And having a gimmicky toy collection helps sell those toys that keeps a show going. Batteries, Keys, Headders, or Shurikens. If you give people a reason to collect them all they will. And the same could be said of almost any children's show since the mid-80's where cartoons began being half-hour long toy commercials like MASK, Transformers, and He-Man. The trend is changing though. Steven Universe is popular and though it has toys and merch attached to it, it's not a purely merch-driven show. KR, Sentai, and PR always will be. And that's a pro because without the toy sales being strong we'd lose our favorite series'.
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The quota is not based on the show itself so even if people rage about how bad the acting or writing is as long as it makes money there is no need to worry about shutting down the franchise.
Bottom line: http://www.reactiongifs.com/r/make-it-rain-dollars.gif |
@Sentai
Which is the point of the post. Because the shows are built around gimmicks, they don't have to worry about ratings. Which is, as the title of the thread says, a pro of bein a toy sale-driven show. (However there was a time when it wasn't the case.) |
i guess when kids and adults have toys in their hands before an episode starts, it motivates them to watch the episodes and after it's finished, they either recreate the scenes with their imagination or watch the episode again to recreate with their toys. Or they buy the toys after the episode is finished and recreate scenes with their imagination or watch it again to recreate them.
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Personally, I don't buy many toys (I'm a renter so space is an issue, also, being 45 they're just not too interesting to me - so, I'll buy a Gashapon here and there), but I like that the most recent series weapons and assorted junk look almost identical to the toy version they're selling - as though they're using the toy prototypes. This is a big change from the 80's where your store bought facsimile was "close-ish" to the one that Han Solo used, or whatever. The synergy between the promotion and product is hilarious to me (in a cool way), particularly in more 'serious' shows like Gaim, where the gimmicks are wildly ridiculous, tonally contrary and toyetic. |
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