Ahh. Yes, balancing a pleasant and inviting user experience with the core mission of the site (catalog, archive, educate) can be a challenge at times. My hope is that if the user mechanics are intuitive and speedy, we can meet the site’s goals while encouraging participation. Right now, we just have a mental concept of the mechanics, which may or may not match reality when it arrives.
In addition to the classification of the category type, there are also the two modifiers of “frequency” and “intensity”. This should help the potential viewer better know what to expect in case they happen to be sensitive to a particular category type.Mango wrote: ↑Tue Aug 05, 2025 9:50 pmWhat I am suggesting is not necessairly to get rid of the "levels" but instead transform them into much more digestible, and arguably more intuitive/clearer tags.
Take, for example, Blood/Gore "low" and how it encapsulates videos that feature just mere scrapes. I would not intuitively connect the term "blood/gore" (even when associated with the word "low"). In fact, I would be outright uncomfortable attaching such a tag onto my video because I would be afraid of turning away those who would otherwise enjoy my video but avoided it for wanting to filter against blood/gore in it's entirety.
Let's say you have a romance AMV that is typical for the genre. The main character is dramatically running to catch their love interest, but they trip and fall, causing a visible arm scrape and a slight bloody nose; nothing graphic, but it’s kinda visible if you’re paying attention. You may decide to put “Blood: low (mild scrape or nose bleed), frequency: low (one or few), intensity: low (hinted or glancing)”. This should alert someone who may be sensitive or phobic of blood that while blood is typically not in a romance AMV at all, this one does have a little bit.
But instead, let's say you have a comedy AMV that shows the typical comedic nose bleed when encountering an attractive person set to the hilarious song “Every time I see you, my nose bleeds”. For this one, you may decide to pick “Blood: low (mild scrapes or nose bleed), frequency: frequent, Intensity: intense / dramatic”. This combination should clearly alert someone who may just be squeamish at the sight of blood that this may not be the AMV for them.
However, to convert each combination of descriptor between just the Type and Intensity value into proper tags, we would need to generate nine specific words or phrases for each category type with intensity. Coming up with nine distinct descriptors for the ten required and twenty-seven total category types would be daunting to create. Viewing and deciding between 90 and 243 words and phrases (or more if we add category types) would be fantastically overwhelming for the video creator to digest and choose from (in my opinion).
With the input mechanic designed as I’ve proposed here, we can provide guidelines that describe the intent of the category type while keeping the view clean, (hopefully) swift understanding of each category type's purpose, and physical input interactions low (prefilled values and radio button interactions).
If frequent further clarification is needed, we could link to individual AMVs as examples of what is meant by each combination of category type and frequency. If the intended use is still unclear even after that, a forum thread or Discord discussion should help with the correct choice.
General fighting is the Violence type in the content descriptor system. My gut reaction (pun intended) is that a typical Pokémon battle could be “low”, Dragon Ball Z could be “middle”, and [insert highly violent anime here] as a “high” examples.
Combining the Violence and Blood category types (both required) for a particular AMV could tell the viewer that there is lots of bloodless (or mild blood) intense fighting going on.
A bloody but not "guts-flying gory" showcase AMV could have this combination of category types selected:Mango wrote: ↑Tue Aug 05, 2025 9:50 pmNow let's I do use a source that showcases blood, well instead of blood medium, I can just use the word blood, and if its a show like naruto, I can also incorporate the previously mentioned fighting tag.
Finally, for "high" lets say this video breaches into including gore, well now they editor can (potentially) use all three tags, fighting, blood, gore.
Blood/gore: Medium, frequent, intense/dramatic
Violence: Medium, frequent, intense/dramatic
Also, I may be inexperienced, but I can’t think of any example of bloodless gore (meaning if there is gore in an AMV, there are copious amounts of blood to go with it). This is why blood and gore are combined into one category type, since gore is the top end of blood (that and that’s how ESRB had it listed). If there are clear examples of low, medium, high gore that show up in AMVs often enough without blood, we can split gore and blood into their own category types.
Again, to duplicate the system I’ve proposed with tags, we would need to provide and review 9 distinct descriptors for blood, 9 descriptors for gore, 9 descriptors for violence, and so on for every category type. That, to me, seems way worse.Mango wrote: ↑Tue Aug 05, 2025 9:50 pmBy finding general, but clear, terms instead of arbitrary levels, you can intutively convey, and discern your want of a "low, medium, and high" for your tags.
Also now that we've separated these tags into clearer terms, it's much more intuitive if we were to mix and match tags with tags under a different "category"
Subjectivity is definitely unavoidable, even under my proposed system. But it's much easier to discern whether a video features blood, as opposed to determining where the blood is on a scale of low, medium, or high.
I, too, am a long-time AMV panel coordinator. While my typical panel is one hour each, sometimes I create 48-hour AMV lounge panels. I often struggle with the “should this be in the show or not” self-doubt. I also sometimes forget that a great AMV actually contained a “high” level in any of the category types (oh yeah, that song has three glancing n-bombs in the lyrics right in the middle of the song; I shouldn’t put that one in the Saturday 11am block).Mango wrote: ↑Tue Aug 05, 2025 9:50 pmI'm coming at this as someone who organizes AMV panels. Just last year I hosted an 18+ panel that featured fanservice, horror, gore, mature topics, and/or raunchy jokes. Those 5 descriptors that I just used are much clearer than, "humor high, language high, sexual themes(medium? high(?)) sexual behavior(medium(?)), alcohol high violence high[...]" and so on.
Requiring a few but clearly related (low, med, high with frequency and intensity) category types will make narrowing a list of 4000 candidate AMVs to a manageable 1000 much easier and accurate than choosing from a list of 243 options to include/exclude. This search feature will be available to everyone.
General tags will still be available. The indicators in this “content descriptors” section is meant to be a standardized set of descriptors that provide a level, intensity, and frequency for each category type.Mango wrote: ↑Tue Aug 05, 2025 9:50 pmIf the system is too subjective that searching / filtering videos is not straightforward, I (and I assume others) will pursue other means to find the videos I need / want (usually AMVNews, word of mouth, and so on) which leads into my last point.
I want the org redesign to breathe life into the community where we can maybe point those starting off in the hobby (either editors or just casual viewers) to check it out, maybe find a video that they like because god knows finding videos under the current YouTube algorithm is very difficult. Tags aren't at all useful if it will cause people to turn away from either videos they may enjoy, or the website due to confusion or annoyance.
Actually, one thing I literally just now thought of: since we will have general tags, we could map known common tags to a specific combination of category type and intensity within the “content descriptors” section and prefill those values for the editor. If the AMV editor prefers the tags interface, we can allow tag inputs to occur before content descriptors. Once the editor is done with tags, they can confirm “none” for non-prefilled required category types and just select the “frequency” qualifier for the category types that have a non-none value. Once we have a word cloud for each level of intensity, we could automatically add them to the tooltip descriptor.
Would that be a successful approach from your perspective? (I think this approach could work for everyone.)
Thank you again for your continued feedback and input!!
Phade.