Zarxrax wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 6:51 pm
I have never really cared about spoilers unless its a really key moment of the story that DEMANDS that you be surprised by it.
I pretty much feel the same. AMVs are amazing in the sense that they're able to condense entire arcs into 3-4 minute videos, but at the same time, it's a much different experience than spending hours watching those events happen throughout multiple episodes. And so even when you're seen the events in an AMV, they oftentimes feel completely new when you watch them with the added context that couldn't possibly fit into a short video. And most of the time, the story in AMVs is altered to fit the context of the song, so seeing the "true" plotline revealed after watching an AMV can have it's own reward.
The only time I've been mad about being spoiled from an AMV is when
this AMV played at Otakon 2013 (August 9-11, 2013). The Danganronpa anime had just started airing a month prior (premiered July 4, 2013), and so at the time of the convention, anime-only watchers were only on episode 6 out of 13. So even though I saw that a Danganronpa AMV was on the contest ballot, I had assumed that I was fine since I had watched all of the currently released episodes. In hindsight, I should have realized that something was strange since Otakon's AMV contest deadline was June 17th that year (2 weeks before the anime even premiered).
So obviously, the editor had used the video game series (which I didn't even know existed at the time). I was completely flabbergasted when the video almost immediately revealed that not only was Junko (a seemingly background character thought to have died in the first episode) still alive, but also the mastermind behind everything. I had actually seen multiple cosplays of her that entire weekend and was wondering why so many people were cosplaying a character that died after having 2 lines, but the truth didn't hit me until the moment I saw the AMV

. But either way, I still enjoyed the show, so I guess no real harm done.