BEFORE CONTINUING, PLEASE NOTE THERE WILL POTENTIALLY BE ALL KINDS OF SPOILERS BELOW IF THEY ARE NOT HIDDEN By participating, you are consenting to spoilers you might come to regret :)
There’s a spoiler-hiding button on Lemmy but since this discussion is about spoilers, I’m not sure how useful it will be.
Does any time in your memory particularly stand out as a truly regrettable spoiler?
examples:
- warned of a Spoiler Alert while scrolling on YT comments or threads, but clicked anyway. You regretted it.
- watched weekly-released shows with friends and you weren’t caught up but needed to know what happened before you watched it, and you regretted it.
- haven’t seen the movie, thought you weren’t going to, you spoiled it for yourself by finding out the plot, and came around to watching the movie and thought to yourself “It would’ve hit better if I didn’t know before hand”.
- podcaster gave a spoiler alert, you proceeded to ignore it, you regretted ignoring it.
It’s such a specific feeling of regret, so I am curious how others’ experiences were and how they compare.
For me,
spoiler
I keep spoiling myself with the show Bleach, reading into the lore and finding out info before actually chronologically watching it (TV)/ reading it in the manga. I come to regret it when I didn’t experience the creator’s (Tite Kubo) work myself first, then follow up with reading into it for background info. In the earlier part of the series I didn’t spoil myself and I feel it was a richer experience because of it.
Also sometimes I listen to “Get Played” which is a podcast about gaming, where they frequently enter “spoiler country” and I love to hear them talk so I get my cowboy hat on and follow them in. I regret it only part of the time.
Get played used to be called How did this get played, right?
I love those guys. Haven’t listened to it in years, but even after listening to Spoiler Country on games I never heard of, it often made me go try the game, or suggest it to my brother so he could experience the twist in the raw.
Yes that’s right! (With Heather Anne Campbell, Nick Wiger and Matt Apodaca) That’s true - it made me try all kinds of games. And for some, I feel I wish I’d have tried them without knowing what was coming. Though I wouldn’t have tried it without knowing… so it’s a bit of a paradox.
I think it’s cool you let your brother experience it raw like that, since you couldn’t.