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24 minutes ago, Focslain said:

Wonder if this might be an opening for Big West to just buy out the macross rights from Tatsunoko.

Though if they did how would that effect HG's contract?

I cannot imagine they could legally do that for the North American distribution, due to HG having an agreement on that already. I think HG would have to somehow violate their licensing agreement in a major way for Tatsunoko to pull the licensing and give it to someone else.

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33 minutes ago, Focslain said:

Wonder if this might be an opening for Big West to just buy out the macross rights from Tatsunoko.

Though if they did how would that effect HG's contract?

They might be able to buy whichever rights don't conflict with the HG deal; as well as a right to purchase those in the future (right of first refusal type thing), or just a contract to purchase thoseĀ once the HG agreement has expired.

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It is probably more relevant to the Mospeada thread due to the new project that was announced last year. Ā Maybe itā€™s related to the pandemic. Ā Still, these days it sure looks like many companies and the industries they are a part ofĀ which Harmony Gold likes to associate themselves and Robotech with,Ā yet rarely actually contributes to,Ā are in hard times.

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7 hours ago, Einherjar said:

Ā 

That's a significant drop... Tatsunoko must be having a really rough year.

Like every studio, they're going to take a nasty hit as a result of the coronavirus lockdown but they've been in a rough patch for a while now and this can't be helping.Ā  The animation studios run on really narrow profit margins even when times are good.Ā  Whether or not one of their new titles is a hit right out of the gate can be the difference between finishing the year in the red or in the black, while it takes years to recoup the costs for the shows that don't take off (if they ever do).Ā  They've got one show running right now, but I can't find any data on average viewership.Ā  Maybe it's not doing well.

Ā 

6 hours ago, jenius said:

No reason to expect anything to come from Tatsunoko not making money... other than Tatsunoko continuing to do business with HG.Ā 

5 hours ago, TheLoneWolf said:

Nothing changed when Takara Tomy purchased a majority ownership stake in Tatsunoko Production. Likewise, this will change nothing.

Yeah, lean years are nothing unusual for an animation production house like Tatsunoko... though if it becomes a multi-year trend they might be in trouble.Ā  I understand they bet a lot onĀ Egao no Daika and it massively did not pay off.

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11 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

That's a significant drop... Tatsunoko must be having a really rough year.

Like every studio, they're going to take a nasty hit as a result of the coronavirus lockdown but they've been in a rough patch for a while now and this can't be helping.Ā  The animation studios run on really narrow profit margins even when times are good.Ā 

Many companies are having a rough year thanks to the pandemic. If they had profit last year but a loss this year, I wouldn't say "Oh noes! :ph34r:". There has to be a defined trend. Have they been trending downward for a few years now? Yes? Then there's a problem. No? Then meh.

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Thatā€™s every year though. They make a lot of noise, nothing happens, repeat next year.Ā 
Ā 

Even when they get something done they mess it up - shadow chronicles apparently could have gotten a follow-up, but HG has ā€œcreative differencesā€ with funimation and scrapped it, thus alienating one of the few companies left still willing to work with them.
Ā 

(not that shadow chronicles was especially good, but it was at least something, and the first production something theyā€™d done since the attempt to do ā€œThe Sentinelsā€).

Ā 

since then I think the only other media they had was a release of the at-the-time 30-year old Mospeada recap episode / Yellow Dancer concert.
Ā 

i am curious if any of this licensing would affect future Mospeada media, assuming anything is actually coming. It doesnā€™t seem to affect distribution of the toys at least.Ā 

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1 hour ago, azrael said:

Many companies are having a rough year thanks to the pandemic. If they had profit last year but a loss this year, I wouldn't say "Oh noes! :ph34r:". There has to be a defined trend. Have they been trending downward for a few years now? Yes? Then there's a problem. No? Then meh.

IIRC, they have been having a rough couple of years... not a strong downward trend like this year, but a downward trend nonetheless.Ā Ā 

Until that report that they're down 89%, there wasn't really cause for anyone to notice since lean years are normal for an animation production house given the fickle anime industry and the notoriously razor-thin profit margins that come with working in it.

Ā 

1 hour ago, Einherjar said:

HG seemed like they were serious about rebooting Robotech in a big way just a year ago with vaguely specific plans,Ā thatā€™s all. Ā If Remix was it, thatā€™s humiliating.

If nothing else, they probably weren't referring toĀ Remix.Ā  That's an alterniverse story, not a reboot.

Harmony Gold likes to talk a big game, but as you know talk is all it ever turns out to be.

RebootingĀ RobotechĀ would require a major outlay... the kind of cash that neither Harmony Gold nor any of its partners or licensees has NEVER been willing to invest in the series.Ā  It'd require them to throw out the original three shows and create all-new material to replace it... and even doing a crap job on that scale costs a lot of money.Ā  Money the franchise does not have, and never did.Ā  EveryĀ RobotechĀ production has been done as cheaply as possible because nobody has ever really been convinced that a newĀ RobotechĀ development has the potential to succeed.Ā  Tommy Yune only got his sub-million dollar budget forĀ Robotech: the Shadow ChroniclesĀ because it was the flagship animated property inĀ Robotech's plan for a reboot and "comeback" in the early 2000s and because he swore blind that it would elevateĀ RobotechĀ into the ranks of mainstream anime and bring in investors that'd bankroll all of the subsequent installments.Ā  That support never materialized, so funding never materialized and the next title had to go beg for money on Kickstarter in order to bankroll a pilot for a new series that looked even more amateurish thanĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ did.

TL;DR: There's nobody out there dumb enough to put upĀ the kind of moneyĀ RobotechĀ needs to do a reboot... not even in Harmony Gold itself.

Ā 

48 minutes ago, jeniusornome said:

Even when they get something done they mess it up - shadow chronicles apparently could have gotten a follow-up, but HG has ā€œcreative differencesā€ with funimation and scrapped it, thus alienating one of the few companies left still willing to work with them.

Is that what they're saying these days?

No, the reason that theĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ OVA was cancelled after just one episode was that a budget for Part II never materialized.Ā  Tommy Yune had to make some fairly grandiose promises to get Harmony Gold to put up the rather paltry budget they provided to produce the first episode andĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ failed to deliver on all of them.Ā  The most critical of those was that the success of the OVA's first episode would attract investors who would bankroll the rest of the episodes.Ā Ā Robotech: the Shadow ChroniclesĀ was released directly to home video and promptly ignored by basically everyone who wasn't aĀ RobotechĀ fan or actively mockingĀ RobotechĀ fans... so it never elevatedĀ RobotechĀ to the ranks of mainstream sci-fi anime, it never brought in that new generation of fans, and it certainly never attracted any investors.Ā  EvenĀ RobotechĀ fans hated it.Ā  So Part II was put on indefinite hiatus because it had no budget.Ā  There were none of the promised outside investors clamoring to put their money intoĀ Robotech, and Harmony Gold wasn't willing to sink any more money into what was looking increasingly like anotherĀ Robo-flop.

Harmony Gold did have some trouble with Funimation later on... but that was when they were negotiating a license renewal forĀ RobotechĀ and went into the negotiations on a colossal ego trip like they thought they were doing Funimation a huge favor by licensing them a property to rivalĀ GundamĀ instead of practically begging Funimation to license a series that's a laughingstock and borderline nonentity in its own genre.Ā  Funimation opted to pass on renewing theĀ RobotechĀ license in the face of Harmony Gold's ridiculous posturing.Ā  I'm sure it probably privately amused Funimation to see Harmony Gold come crawling back years later with a much more appropriately humble attitude... though I'm equally sure they're far too professional to let it show on their faces.

Ā 

48 minutes ago, jeniusornome said:

since then I think the only other media they had was a release of the at-the-time 30-year old Mospeada recap episode / Yellow Dancer concert.

With a few minutes of poor quality original animation thrown in to tenuously connect it toĀ Robotech, yeah.

Ā 

48 minutes ago, jeniusornome said:

i am curious if any of this licensing would affect future Mospeada media, assuming anything is actually coming. It doesnā€™t seem to affect distribution of the toys at least.Ā 

Harmony Gold's licenses exclude Japan, so it won't have any impact on anything Tatsunoko or its licensees produce forĀ MOSPEADAĀ in the Japanese domestic market...Ā 

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5 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

IIRC, they have been having a rough couple of years... not a strong downward trend like this year, but a downward trend nonetheless.Ā Ā 

Until that report that they're down 89%, there wasn't really cause for anyone to notice since lean years are normal for an animation production house given the fickle anime industry and the notoriously razor-thin profit margins that come with working in it.

Ā 

If nothing else, they probably weren't referring toĀ Remix.Ā  That's an alterniverse story, not a reboot.

Harmony Gold likes to talk a big game, but as you know talk is all it ever turns out to be.

RebootingĀ RobotechĀ would require a major outlay... the kind of cash that neither Harmony Gold nor any of its partners or licensees has NEVER been willing to invest in the series.Ā  It'd require them to throw out the original three shows and create all-new material to replace it... and even doing a crap job on that scale costs a lot of money.Ā  Money the franchise does not have, and never did.Ā  EveryĀ RobotechĀ production has been done as cheaply as possible because nobody has ever really been convinced that a newĀ RobotechĀ development has the potential to succeed.Ā  Tommy Yune only got his sub-million dollar budget forĀ Robotech: the Shadow ChroniclesĀ because it was the flagship animated property inĀ Robotech's plan for a reboot and "comeback" in the early 2000s and because he swore blind that it would elevateĀ RobotechĀ into the ranks of mainstream anime and bring in investors that'd bankroll all of the subsequent installments.Ā  That support never materialized, so funding never materialized and the next title had to go beg for money on Kickstarter in order to bankroll a pilot for a new series that looked even more amateurish thanĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ did.

TL;DR: There's nobody out there dumb enough to put upĀ the kind of moneyĀ RobotechĀ needs to do a reboot... not even in Harmony Gold itself.

Ā 

Is that what they're saying these days?

No, the reason that theĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ OVA was cancelled after just one episode was that a budget for Part II never materialized.Ā  Tommy Yune had to make some fairly grandiose promises to get Harmony Gold to put up the rather paltry budget they provided to produce the first episode andĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ failed to deliver on all of them.Ā  The most critical of those was that the success of the OVA's first episode would attract investors who would bankroll the rest of the episodes.Ā Ā Robotech: the Shadow ChroniclesĀ was released directly to home video and promptly ignored by basically everyone who wasn't aĀ RobotechĀ fan or actively mockingĀ RobotechĀ fans... so it never elevatedĀ RobotechĀ to the ranks of mainstream sci-fi anime, it never brought in that new generation of fans, and it certainly never attracted any investors.Ā  EvenĀ RobotechĀ fans hated it.Ā  So Part II was put on indefinite hiatus because it had no budget.Ā  There were none of the promised outside investors clamoring to put their money intoĀ Robotech, and Harmony Gold wasn't willing to sink any more money into what was looking increasingly like anotherĀ Robo-flop.

Harmony Gold did have some trouble with Funimation later on... but that was when they were negotiating a license renewal forĀ RobotechĀ and went into the negotiations on a colossal ego trip like they thought they were doing Funimation a huge favor by licensing them a property to rivalĀ GundamĀ instead of practically begging Funimation to license a series that's a laughingstock and borderline nonentity in its own genre.Ā  Funimation opted to pass on renewing theĀ RobotechĀ license in the face of Harmony Gold's ridiculous posturing.Ā  I'm sure it probably privately amused Funimation to see Harmony Gold come crawling back years later with a much more appropriately humble attitude... though I'm equally sure they're far too professional to let it show on their faces.

Ā 

With a few minutes of poor quality original animation thrown in to tenuously connect it toĀ Robotech, yeah.

Ā 

Harmony Gold's licenses exclude Japan, so it won't have any impact on anything Tatsunoko or its licensees produce forĀ MOSPEADAĀ in the Japanese domestic market...Ā 

Nobody wants to fund a brand-new RT anything because RT is just a mish-mash of 3 series, and the first one was the most worthwhile out of the three. It's a shame the animation for Macross couldn't be fully updated, but I don't think Tatsunoko is interested in that, as that would be revisiting the past (which Kawamori-san doesn't like to do), and they'd much rather focus on future projects.

While RT got me into Macross (and I promptly abandoned RT when I found Macross to be superior), Southern Cross was just... let's just say that if Dana was the last girl on Earth and I were lonely for 500 years, I'd still jump off a cliff rather than talk to her for five minutes. And Mospeada.... that series is so depressing, I'm convinced that all the mechs run on Zoloft.

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1 hour ago, pengbuzz said:

It's a shame the animation for Macross couldn't be fully updated, but I don't think Tatsunoko is interested in that, as that would be revisiting the past (which Kawamori-san doesn't like to do), and they'd much rather focus on future projects.

Oh no, no... Tatsunoko Production would LOVE to get their foot inĀ Macross's door again.Ā  They want a piece of that action REAL bad.Ā  So bad that they went to court to try to claim they were owed royalties from subsequentĀ MacrossĀ works because of their involvement in funding production of the original series.Ā  The courts shot 'em down.

It's not hard to see why that would appeal to them, though.Ā  Like every animation production house, Tatsunoko has to cope with the razor-thin profit margins of the anime industry and therefore nothing would be quite so appealing as having even a modest percentage of the steady revenue stream produced by a fairly consistentĀ earner likeĀ Macross.Ā Ā 

Of course, with Kawamori being a bigshot at Satelight there's basically no chance that Tatsunoko will ever get to be involved in aĀ MacrossĀ production again.Ā  Kawamori, for his part, does still seem to be averse to the idea of direct sequels.

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Didn't the bulk of Tatsunoko's talent from that era leave to staff up Production I.G.?

Anyway, as it was said many times before: Why pay royalties to HG when you can just make Sci-Fi movie/show with none of the legal baggage.

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On 6/25/2020 at 8:27 AM, jeniusornome said:

Thatā€™s every year though. They make a lot of noise, nothing happens, repeat next year.Ā 

I argue that this was not the case this time around at leastĀ storytelling-wise. Ā There are varying opinions about the Robotech universe, (primarily,Ā secondary, etc.Ā canon stuffĀ for those who take it seriously), but at the bare minimum you can at leastĀ appreciate thatĀ the powers that be at one point tried to craft a story and universe that was distinctly original from the source material. Ā To see a lot of that thrown under the super dimensional bus, blatantlyĀ and unnecessarily at that, just to make the franchise more like Macross in ways previous staff never had the gutsĀ to doĀ is pretty cruel.

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You mean, you think they made a lot of noise this time and had something in mind other than the comic?

Small group of a real estate company with minimal staff, shrinking revenue and dwindling relevance of IP with a smaller and smaller fanbase, grasping at straws to make a big deal out of anything they can to try and generate some revenue?

Given HG's failed attempts over the years to do anything with the property, I think it's unlikely it was anything other than talk to try and drum up interest/funding. Like HG is doing the equivalent of saying "hey remember Robotech? Wasn't that great? How about some money for old time's sake?"

We still don't know what actually happened with Robotech Remix, but HG obviously didn't care enough about it to try and keep it going.

Speaking of Mospeada, how's the licensing for that handled? It's a Tatsunoko property so I assume HG has some license with them for it, but when Sentinel, Evolution Toy, whhoever, makes a Mospeada product, does HG get a cut when it's sold in the US?

Maybe they'll hang their hat on a new Mospeada and call it a day.

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15 hours ago, DewPoint said:

Didn't the bulk of Tatsunoko's talent from that era leave to staff up Production I.G.?

Yes and no... Production I.G. was originally I.G. Tatsunoko Limited, a satellite production house that Tatsunoko Production set up to help it retain talented staff in '87.Ā  They bought out Tatsunoko's 20% stake in the company and went solo in 1993 to become Production I.G., and now own an 11.2% stake in their former parent company.

Ā 

15 hours ago, DewPoint said:

Anyway, as it was said many times before: Why pay royalties to HG when you can just make Sci-Fi movie/show with none of the legal baggage.

Indeed.

Ā 

Ā 

6 minutes ago, Einherjar said:

I argue that this was not the case this time around at leastĀ storytelling-wise. Ā There are varying opinions about the Robotech universe, (primarily,Ā secondary, etc.Ā canon stuffĀ for those who take it seriously), but at the bare minimum you can at leastĀ appreciate thatĀ the powers that be at one point tried to craft a story and universe that was distinctly original from the source material.

Eh... it wasn't really something they were actively trying to do, it just kind of happened because their plans to release theirĀ bowdlerized localization of theĀ Super Dimension Fortress MacrossĀ TV series were shot to hell by Revell and they had to start over from scratch and invent ways to tieĀ MacrossĀ into two other shows on the fly to meet the new demand for a series long enough for first-run syndication.Ā  They didn't plan a damn thing, they were very literally making it up as they went... which is why there are so many inconsistencies and outright errors in their version.

Ā 

6 minutes ago, Einherjar said:

Ā To see a lot of that thrown under the super dimensional bus, blatantlyĀ and unnecessarily at that, just to make the franchise more like Macross in ways previous staff never had the gutsĀ to doĀ is pretty cruel.

Oh my, no... the previous staff, by which we mean Carl Macek, absolutely had the guts (and the necessary lack of creative integrity) to do exactlyĀ that.

Every pitch he made for aĀ RobotechĀ project, save one, was built onĀ MacrossĀ and makingĀ RobotechĀ more likeĀ Macross.Ā  The few ideas he had that weren't shut down by the lawyers at Harmony Gold and/or Tatsunoko Production for being dangerously close to, or actually,Ā infringing on Big West's copyrights were shut down by his own incompetence.Ā Ā Robotech II: the SentinelsĀ was the closest he got, a story about theĀ MacrossĀ cast and a new generation of characters who were all just thinly disguised knockoffs ofĀ MacrossĀ characters, using the closest he could get to a VF-1 (the Legioss) and a bunch of imitation-brandĀ MacrossĀ mecha that were meant to be distinct enough to not incur a lawsuit while looking enough like designs fromĀ MacrossĀ to be familiar.Ā  Fortunately for him, his own ineptitude flew the poorly-funded project into the ground before the exchange rate crash administered the coup de grace before most of the potentially-infringing material could be animated.Ā  The one time he got away from his obsession with trying to "Macross-ize"Ā RobotechĀ was the biggest flop in the franchise's history prior toĀ Robotech Academy...Ā Robotech 3000.Ā  Since he wasn't allowed to rip offĀ MacrossĀ the way he wanted to, all he could do was bash it in interviews like a petulant and deeply disingenuous man-child.

The current staff aren't any sharper, but they AREĀ aware that there are alternative media formats where they CAN get away with that kind of thing because of the way their license is drawn up.Ā  That's why the flagship title for the rebooted and relaunchedĀ RobotechĀ franchise in the early 2000s was a collection ofĀ Macross-based comics.Ā  It's likely no coincidence its first title was a prequel about the development of the VF-1... conceived around the timeĀ Macross ZeroĀ promotional materials started doing the rounds online and published the same month as the debut ofĀ Macross Zero's first episode.Ā  The one non-MacrossĀ comic they did had to have aĀ MacrossĀ mini-comic in it to sell it.Ā  When the time came to do animation, the same legal constraints were applied and they had to go for a more Macek-level attempt toĀ Macross-ize theĀ MOSPEADAĀ ships and mecha... and as with Macek, a lot of their proposals ended up rejected by legal for "are you trying to get us sued?" reasons.

Apart from the "original" series,Ā Robotech's history is a nearly-unbroken continuity of "how can we be more likeĀ MacrossĀ to make people like us?".

Ā 

Ā 

30 minutes ago, jeniusornome said:

Given HG's failed attempts over the years to do anything with the property, I think it's unlikely it was anything other than talk to try and drum up interest/funding. Like HG is doing the equivalent of saying "hey remember Robotech? Wasn't that great? How about some money for old time's sake?"

Same reason they were constantly banging on about the live action movie license and insisting it was not only practically a done deal but set to be a tentpole franchise for a major studio... trying to drum up enough interest to actually get funding toĀ doĀ something.

Ā 

30 minutes ago, jeniusornome said:

We still don't know what actually happened with Robotech Remix, but HG obviously didn't care enough about it to try and keep it going.

Well, we now have Diamond Comic Distributors' cancellation lists for both June and July (there is no May list due to the shutdown)... and there are some new minor developments on that front.Ā Ā Robotech RemixĀ #5 is still listed as cancelled, and as of JuneĀ Robotech RemixĀ #6 is also officially listed as cancelled with Status 2 ("will resolicit").Ā  The series is still absent from Titan's release schedule through the end of the year.Ā  With issue #5 now almost six months late, it seems highly probable the series was quietly cancelled due to poor sales or some other issue that Titan doesn't want to draw attention to.Ā  The total silence makes me suspect legal problems.

Titan's trade paperback editions of Comico'sĀ RobotechĀ comics also showed up on the list with status 2, though in that case it appears to be a multi-month delay with Titan's release schedule now showing the next volume as planned for 2020 Week 38 (the week of September 14-20).Ā Ā 

Ā 

30 minutes ago, jeniusornome said:

Speaking of Mospeada, how's the licensing for that handled? It's a Tatsunoko property so I assume HG has some license with them for it, but when Sentinel, Evolution Toy, whhoever, makes a Mospeada product, does HG get a cut when it's sold in the US?

Nope... not unless they import it and resell it in their own store.

Harmony Gold's license excludes Japan, so if a Japanese company decides to license the property to make merchandise intended for sale in the Japanese domestic market HG has no involvement at all because that's all occurring outside the scope of their license.Ā  Likewise, if that product intended for the JDM should happen to be sold internationally by a store in Japan... Harmony Gold can't do a damn thing to stop it because it's a Japanese product made under a Japanese license and and the sale technically occurred in Japan.Ā  They wouldn't receive any percentage of the sale... which is why toy collectors should only buy authenticĀ MacrossĀ and MOSPEADAĀ merchandise from Japan, and not the stuff made by Toynami and KidzLogic under licenses from HG.

That's also why Harmony Gold can't do anything to stop stores like HobbyLink Japan, Amazon Japan, Mandarake, etc. from sellingĀ MacrossĀ goods outside of Japan.Ā  Those stores are still based in Japan and thus the sales technically occur in Japan, where Harmony Gold has no rights to the propertyĀ and therefore no legal standing to bring a complaint.

Ā 

30 minutes ago, jeniusornome said:

Maybe they'll hang their hat on a new Mospeada and call it a day.

Unlikely,Ā MacrossĀ isĀ Robotech's money spinner...Ā MOSPEADAĀ toys and goods don't sell anywhere near as well for them.

They're still trying to offload ToynamiĀ MOSPEADAĀ stuff they made over a decade ago..

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3 hours ago, jeniusornome said:

You mean, you think they made a lot of noise this time and had something in mind other than the comic?

I think the comic was supposed to be the main focus for the foreseeable future. Ā The staffĀ would not have been given so much freedom to shake up the universe as they did if thatĀ was not the case. Ā I would argue that they were given responsibilitiesĀ normally heldĀ by a certain Creative Director for Robotech. Ā Then again, as with how other comic books work the people responsible for some the the drastic changes did could not stay for evenĀ one generation of the story to complete. Ā Hopefully their replacements were left with a rough plan forĀ where this off the railsĀ story was supposed to go.

Edited by Einherjar
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  • 3 months later...
1 hour ago, Knight26 said:

Someone posted this to FB today, has there been some new that we missed?

Well, not really...

We already knew about Big West having successfully challenged Harmony Gold's trademarks in a bunch of key markets including the UK, EU, and PRC... though IIRC in the EU Harmony Gold'sĀ pro formaĀ objections to the initial ruling in Big West's favor are still winding their way through the system.

The meme you found is kind of an exaggeration.Ā  Those rulings aren't enough to inflict lethal damage on theĀ RobotechĀ franchise.Ā  Losing their trademarks in the UK and EU is more an inconvenience than anything, since Harmony Gold's own disclosures about their use of their trademarks there revealed that merchandise sales in that market were practically nonexistent.Ā  Losing them in China and having Big West release all ofĀ Macross's sequels there might hurt them a bit more given that they'd pinned a lot of their hopes for the future on the Chinese market.Ā  The lynchpin of their whole operation is the trademarks in the United States, which unfortunately can't be challenged the same way that the trademarks elsewhere were because US trademark law preferences first use in market over actual ownership.Ā Ā RobotechĀ might have one foot and four toes on the other in the grave, but it won't be all the way in until that tiny cult American fanbase deteriorates to the point that it's no longer profitable to maintain the franchise for any reason.

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10 minutes ago, Seto Kaiba said:

Well, not really...

We already knew about Big West having successfully challenged Harmony Gold's trademarks in a bunch of key markets including the UK, EU, and PRC... though IIRC in the EU Harmony Gold'sĀ pro formaĀ objections to the initial ruling in Big West's favor are still winding their way through the system.

The meme you found is kind of an exaggeration.Ā  Those rulings aren't enough to inflict lethal damage on theĀ RobotechĀ franchise.Ā  Losing their trademarks in the UK and EU is more an inconvenience than anything, since Harmony Gold's own disclosures about their use of their trademarks there revealed that merchandise sales in that market were practically nonexistent.Ā  Losing them in China and having Big West release all ofĀ Macross's sequels there might hurt them a bit more given that they'd pinned a lot of their hopes for the future on the Chinese market.Ā  The lynchpin of their whole operation is the trademarks in the United States, which unfortunately can't be challenged the same way that the trademarks elsewhere were because US trademark law preferences first use in market over actual ownership.Ā Ā RobotechĀ might have one foot and four toes on the other in the grave, but it won't be all the way in until that tiny cult American fanbase deteriorates to the point that it's no longer profitable to maintain the franchise for any reason.

So I assume that unless something drastically changed with copyright law (since BW didn't unveil Macross first in the US), HG losing the rights in North America simply isn't going to happen? I had been wondering if BW was trying to build some kind of legal precedent in other courts worldwide, but I doubt it would apply in the US anyways.

Guess a lot of us still hope for the day when Macross would flow freely in the US....

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52 minutes ago, Seto Kaiba said:

RobotechĀ might have one foot and four toes on the other in the grave, but it won't be all the way in until that tiny cult American fanbase deteriorates to the point that it's no longer profitable to maintain the franchise for any reason.

So the thought came to me. What if Harmony Gold is holding ontoĀ RobotechĀ so hard is not to make a profit, but a lose. That way they can use it as a tax dodge, something that has been show many other big businesses have been doing for a while.

Guess it depends on how Harmony Gold's businesses are connected.

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52 minutes ago, pengbuzz said:

So I assume that unless something drastically changed with copyright law (since BW didn't unveil Macross first in the US), HG losing the rights in North America simply isn't going to happen? I had been wondering if BW was trying to build some kind of legal precedent in other courts worldwide, but I doubt it would apply in the US anyways.

Unless the US reverses itself and adjusts its trademark laws to match what's done in most of the rest of the world, we're kind of stuck unless Harmony Gold either sells its rights or lets those trademarks expire due to disuse.Ā  There are a few ways that could happen, like Tatsunoko Production refusing to renew Harmony Gold's license or pricing it beyond what they're willing to spend, the franchise deteriorating to the point that it's not worth maintaining, or simply not having any merchandise sales to support asserting the trademark is in use.

Ā 

13 minutes ago, Focslain said:

So the thought came to me. What if Harmony Gold is holding ontoĀ RobotechĀ so hard is not to make a profit, but a lose. That way they can use it as a tax dodge, something that has been show many other big businesses have been doing for a while.

Guess it depends on how Harmony Gold's businesses are connected.

That is also possible.Ā  Some fans speculate that Harmony Gold is keepingĀ RobotechĀ limping along specifically to hang onto theĀ MacrossĀ rights in the hopes of making a big payday on either selling it off toĀ Macross's owners or forcing licensing to go through them so they get a small regular payday without doing any work.

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7 minutes ago, Seto Kaiba said:

Unless the US reverses itself and adjusts its trademark laws to match what's done in most of the rest of the world, we're kind of stuck unless Harmony Gold either sells its rights or lets those trademarks expire due to disuse.Ā  There are a few ways that could happen, like Tatsunoko Production refusing to renew Harmony Gold's license or pricing it beyond what they're willing to spend, the franchise deteriorating to the point that it's not worth maintaining, or simply not having any merchandise sales to support asserting the trademark is in use.

So I wonder what the bottom limit is to demonstrate sales that assert trademark use? I suspect even one comic book title, crappy collectible or whatnot is enough.

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35 minutes ago, pengbuzz said:

So I wonder what the bottom limit is to demonstrate sales that assert trademark use? I suspect even one comic book title, crappy collectible or whatnot is enough.

I don't think there is a limit.Ā  You have a Trademark and want to keep it just keep paying whatever legal fee may be involved (and fend off any lawsuits) and it is yours.

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1 minute ago, Dynaman said:

I don't think there is a limit.Ā  You have a Trademark and want to keep it just keep paying whatever legal fee may be involved (and fend off any lawsuits) and it is yours.

Nah, to file for registration of a trademark or renew a register trademark you have to be able to demonstrate that you are actuallyĀ usingĀ the trademark in a commercial context.

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Well, my English is a bit rusty, at least for writing, so sorry for my terrible English.
(I'm helping myself with the google translator, hehe).
I was always better listening and reading it than writing it. NotĀ  to mention having to talk it.

But hey, better step to the subject in question:

Some time ago, I was noticing how in other English-speaking forums that I'm in, including this one, as well as the official Robotech page on facebook, and the official Robotech forum, and many other pages, as I have noticed and am close to saying that Robotech, as a franchise is totally dead, especially there in the US.

Could you confirm if this is so in your experience?
And when I say dead franchise, I mean that sales are low, there are no new series or new productions, the general public does not care, does not remember or does not know it directly.

And what I see of current Robotech products, like the 1: 6 scale VF-1S from Fokker, created by Kids Logic, the F-14 line from Calibre Wings, or the VF-1J, (from Hikaru , with FAST Pack in a scene in atmosphere?) by Prime 1 Studio, they are all creations and editions made by those companies under the license of the Robotech name, but are in no way created by Harmony Gold USA.

This means that the companies are the ones who pay the license to HG for the use of the name (I'm not sure about the use of the design), and they should give it their good commission from the profits as well.
But HG at no time puts part of its money, invests time and / or effort, and certainly does not take the risks.

All that makes me point out that in addition to the Robotech franchise being dead, Harmony Gold does everything possible to keep up the appearances that Robotech is a current, modern and current series, and they promise and promise about the live action movie. .. but nothing ever happens.

All of which reminds me of this movie:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCTgcZ6ImsQ

Ā 

Harmony Gold maintains the appearance that Robotech is a living franchise, to be able to obtain more business from naive companies such as Kids Logic or Calibre Wings, and thus obtain profits without any risk.

In summary, that is more or less my appreciation after seeing certain attitudes from Harmony Gold, and seeing the Robotech fandom, as well as part of the general public when asked about said franchise.

And no, that there are two or three lost fans, it does not solve anything, because it is not like with Macross that although I do not like Delta and I find it quite bad, the truth is that it sells.
Macross in Japan is still a commercial boom.
You know, there are full concerts, movies continue to come out, millions of models and high-quality toys are sold, there is a museum, there are specialized bars, there are even many fans outside of Japan who have no problem buying imported models, either in the USA or in Latin America.

Robotech, the truth is that they no longer want or see it in the country of origin (USA).

Edited by Ikaruss
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32 minutes ago, Ikaruss said:

Some time ago, I was noticing how in other English-speaking forums that I am in, including this one, as well as the official Robotech page on facebook, and the official Robotech forum, and many other pages, as I have noticed and am close to saying that Robotech, as a franchise is totally dead, especially there in the US.

Could you confirm if this is so in your experience?
And when I say dead franchise, I mean that sales are low, there are no new series or new productions, the general public does not care, does not remember or does not know it directly.

As you defined it, yes...Ā RobotechĀ is a dead franchise in the US.

The last serious effort to produce a continuation ofĀ Robotech's animated series was theĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ OVA, which was cancelled in 2007 with just one episode completed after it was poorly received by fans and ignored by everyone else.Ā  In 2014, Harmony Gold tried and failed to crowdfund the production of a pilot episode for a new TV series under the title ofĀ Robotech Academy.Ā  They quit a week before the end of their fundraising period when it became evident they were only going to reach about 40% of their pledge goal.Ā  That was the last anyone heard ofĀ Robotech's animated series except for the occasional announcement that the 85 episode TV series moved from one streaming service to another.

The one and onlyĀ RobotechĀ comic book is supposedly on indefinite hiatus after the publisher just stopped releasing issues without any kind of explanation.Ā  There have been no new novels or video games.Ā  Low quantities of licensed toys and some cheap apparel are allĀ RobotechĀ is producing these days.

It would not be a stretch to say that the main reasonĀ RobotechĀ is remembered at all outside of its fandom is because of the legal problems Harmony Gold causes for other, far more popular, properties likeĀ MechWarrior,Ā Transformers, orĀ Macross.

Ā 

Ā 

32 minutes ago, Ikaruss said:

This means that the companies are the ones who pay the license to HG for the use of the name (I'm not sure about the use of the design), and they should give you their good commission from the profits as well.
But HG at no time puts part of its money, invests time and / or effort, and certainly does not take the risks.

Well, yes... that's how licensed merchandising works.Ā  That's normal, even for successful franchises.

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On 10/22/2020 at 2:12 PM, Knight26 said:

Someone posted this to FB today, has there been some new that we missed?
Image may contain: one or more people, text that says 'BIG WEST'S Lawyers HO World Intellectual Property Organization ROBOTECH So we Renewed the Rights JRP from Tatsunoko and... TRADEMARKS RIGTHS RESTORED TO BIG WEST ACROSS THE WORLD LAT ROBO,'

Sorry... that was me... just having some fun with a meme trending in the Latino Anime fanbase... it wasn't because recent news or anything :(

Edited by Gerli
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21 hours ago, Seto Kaiba said:

As you defined it, yes...Ā RobotechĀ is a dead franchise in the US.

The last serious effort to produce a continuation ofĀ Robotech's animated series was theĀ Shadow ChroniclesĀ OVA, which was cancelled in 2007 with just one episode completed after it was poorly received by fans and ignored by everyone else.Ā  In 2014, Harmony Gold tried and failed to crowdfund the production of a pilot episode for a new TV series under the title ofĀ Robotech Academy.Ā  They quit a week before the end of their fundraising period when it became evident they were only going to reach about 40% of their pledge goal.Ā  That was the last anyone heard ofĀ Robotech's animated series except for the occasional announcement that the 85 episode TV series moved from one streaming service to another.

The one and onlyĀ RobotechĀ comic book is supposedly on indefinite hiatus after the publisher just stopped releasing issues without any kind of explanation.Ā  There have been no new novels or video games.Ā  Low quantities of licensed toys and some cheap apparel are allĀ RobotechĀ is producing these days.

It would not be a stretch to say that the main reasonĀ RobotechĀ is remembered at all outside of its fandom is because of the legal problems Harmony Gold causes for other, far more popular, properties likeĀ MechWarrior,Ā Transformers, orĀ Macross.

Ā 

Ā 

Well, yes... that's how licensed merchandising works.Ā  That's normal, even for successful franchises.

I count it Robotech Academy like the point of no return for the Robotech's death.

(The funniest thing was to hear the people of HG talk that they decided to leave Robotech Academy because it was not the best format for the series, and a long blah blah, but never accept that a few days after the deadline, they would not arrive to the promised amount) XD.

Ā 

Ā 

4 hours ago, Gerli said:

Sorry... that was me... just having some fun with a meme trending in the Latino Anime fanbase... it wasn't because recent news or anything :(

Siempre dando la nota, vos... jajaja...
--------

You always giving the note... hahaha...

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1 hour ago, Ikaruss said:

I count it Robotech Academy like the point of no return for the Robotech's death.

(The funniest thing was to hear the people of HG talk that they decided to leave Robotech Academy because it was not the best format for the series, and a long blah blah, but never accept that a few days after the deadline, they would not arrive to the promised amount) XD.

That was business as usual.Ā  Every time one of their attempts at newĀ RobotechĀ development gets cancelled, they spend the next several years loudly insisting that it's still being worked on and giving every excuse they can think of for why it's not coming out at every convention they attend until the fans stop caring.Ā  Then they quietly admit it was cancelled all along.

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1 hour ago, Seto Kaiba said:

That was business as usual.Ā  Every time one of their attempts at newĀ RobotechĀ development gets cancelled, they spend the next several years loudly insisting that it's still being worked on and giving every excuse they can think of for why it's not coming out at every convention they attend until the fans stop caring.Ā  Then they quietly admit it was cancelled all along.

AKA being stunningly and embarrassingly full of crap. If HG could make money on that, they'd have no need of RT.

Come to think of it... them "promoting" RT was exactly that all along, right?

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