• Pamasich@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I don’t care if it’s animated in 2d or 3d, I just want it to look good. And cgi doesn’t automatically make the anime look bad.

    What usually makes an anime look bad is obvious cgi used in an otherwise 2d anime. Not always though, Fate/Zero’s Berserker is an example of obvious cgi that looked good.

    I don’t really mind full cgi anime. I’m loving the current Kamierabi, for example. But they look off to me for the first half or full episode before I get used to it. Even Houseki no Kuni was like that. There are of course bad looking full cgi anime, but in general they don’t look worse than 2d anime to me.

    I also don’t mind cgi backgrounds in 2d anime. Dekiru Neko looked amazing and the backgrounds definitely contributed to that, not the opposite.

  • usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    It’s almost always done poorly, and it’s really hard for me to get into a fully CG anime because of this. Part of the point of watching anime is for the animation and CG tends to be very poorly animated (the models tend to be too rigid and they often artificially lower the framerate across the board instead of selectively like with hand-drawn).

    Like anything, it has limitations and strengths which need to be accounted for. Land of the Lustrous might be the only CG anime that I wasn’t just thinking it would’ve been better with traditional animation.

    When used for specific parts of a 2D anime it’s hit and miss too, but again that’s an error in execution. It does seem like mediocre CG looks worse than mediocre 2D, so that doesn’t help either.

  • The Giant Korean@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The CGI is kind of jarring for me when used along with traditional animation. It’s such a stark contrast of smoothness of animation that it detracts from the experience for me. So I’d say either CGI or traditional, but not both.

  • Send_me_nude_girls@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I don’t like it at all. I know sometimes it’s hidden and small scenes can get away with it, but I generally don’t like it because mostly it’s done cheap. It almost ruined Attack on Titan for me, thankfully I stuck with it as it’s amazing. I couldn’t watch Beastars or this horror one everyone likes. I could deal with land of the lustrous for a bit but got bored, because the art style, while magnitudes better than most cgi, still looks worse in my eyes and than the story needs to be extraordinary good to balance it. I can’t unsee most cgi no matter what. Good cgi is still noticable to me, even if the art style stays the same, my brain can tell by the complexity of the scene and how hand drawn they’d have done it in a different way. I however like full cgi, like Zoomania.

  • 520@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Like any artistic tool, it can be used to great effect but it can also be done shitty too.

    People think of CGI as 3D models but it is so much more than that. It also includes lighting and physics engines. It enables things that either cannot be done manually or are too laborious to do for every single frame of an anime.

    Used well, it can really enhance scenes with things like animations of background elements like grass or lighting effects. Used poorly, it can really pull you out of the scene.

    What do I mean by poorly? Well, when you mix and match manual animations with CGI without considering the nature of both, would be a good start, and something that many anime are guilty of.

    Manual animations are very approximate and choppy, with clear distinctions between key frames that are obviously meant to be the focal point, and tween frames that are transitional. Manual animations hang on to their key frames longer than the tween frames, even if there are slight alterations (eg: mouth movements) between one frame and the next.

    CGI animation is very precise and smooth, and animates much more mechanically. It has no concept of a key frame, and moves from A to B in a perfectly consistent speed, in a mechanical way. Even if the animators cap the framerate to 25fps, the difference in movement is still obvious if that’s all they’ve done. Same goes for lighting too, switching from 2D manual shading to 3D automated shading can be really obvious.

    There are ways to eliminate this problem, but it takes great care and planning with regards to art styles in order to do it correctly.

  • LwL@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Mostly annoying, largely because it looks very stuttery to me. When it’s integrated seemlessly, it’s fine (more often the case for background related cgi). Even in something like chainsaw man which did it pretty well I still found the cgi in the action scenes grating, it took me out of it a little.

    Full cgi i mostly get annoyed at the stutter, and I like the style most full cgi anime have a lot less than most 2D anime.

  • Rottcodd@ani.social
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    1 year ago

    I couldn’t care less.

    Honestly, I think that making a distinction based on the tools used to create an anime is asinine.

    The only things that matter to me are whether or not the art fits, and whether or not it’s well executed. I couldn’t care less if it’s 100% hand-drawn or 100% CGI or anything in between - if it’s well executed and appropriate to the anime, then it’s good, and if it’s not then it’s not.

  • rephlekt2718@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I mostly hate when they mix 2d and 3d, it always stands out too much. Like the tanks in the original avatar series, or when mappa started animating AOT and used 3d on the titans. I think if you stick with 3d for everything, it can be pretty good

  • Grass@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Apart from beastars making the rabbits look totally different from the original work, and just off looking in general, no major complaints as long as it doesn’t look super incongruent or anything. I can’t actually think of anything else off the top of my head that bothered me about 3d use in any show and that was just a poor design choice that could have been done in 2d as well.

  • ReluctantZen@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    It fully depends on how it’s done.

    If it’s done as a time/cost saving measure, I don’t like it because it usually shows. It rarely matches with the 2D animation both stylistically and in movement. It looks better in one anime, and worse in another, but I usually prefer 2D either way, especially for things in the foreground. For example, MAPPA’s AoT 3D looks pretty good compared to most other anime, but you can still really tell, unless they stop moving. They feel weightless otherwise and move in a way that don’t match 2D movements.

    If it’s done with 3D in mind from the start because it’s 3D and not to replace 2D, like Land of the Lustrous, then I think it’s great, because then they use the strengths of 3D animation instead of just seeing it as a cheap replacement for handdrawn 2D animation. Land of the Lustrous is still one of the prettiest anime to date in my opinion, because you can tell the studio cared about its 3D.

  • BlinkerFluid@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I use the new Bleach arc as a good example of 2D and 3D blending well enough that you don’t care, and looking better than literally everything else.

  • Tamlyn@lemmy.zip
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    1 year ago

    So there are anime that has full CGI and the one that use it for complicated scenes. For the full cgi anime, they often look quite cheap, the reason CGI is more expensive than drawn thing and they don’t have the budget to make it properly. Usualy i don’t like it. And for the anime that only use in in certain cases is hardly depend of the quality. Still it’s often quite low as again, CGI is more expensive. So you clearly see when it is used, it destroys imersion and just look bad. But in a few cases, that are seldom it looks alright and i understand why they used in in that place. I clearly prefer if they refrain from using it, but at the end it hardly depends on the outcom and if it looks good, i don’t care about it.