Why do anime characters always narrate the obvious?

Is it because nips don't know how to write proper dialogue?

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It seems that you only watch shounens and shitty melodramas

Not a problem unique to anime.

So autistic manchildren not capable of reading emotions can know for sure that he hates it.

Hmmm... I wonder what did OP mean by that.

Because most anime are adaptations of manga and novels and it's necessary to "narrate the obvious" in them just like books if they don't narrate the obvious you will never know what's happening , you retard.

Because anime is for stupid people.

I think they just dont teach "show dont tell" lessons in japanese schools.
JoJo first chapters are ridiculous how they explain EVERYTHING the viewer has already understood.

I would say that too, but you would be suprised how many anons here wouldn't understand or get anything unless everything is specifically stated or shown.

Because anime is for asians, and asians are autistic, so there is no subtext in dialogue. That's why autistic westerners like anime so much.

Because the nips have stupid people too.
You get a lot of them here on Sup Forums for example.
As much as people complain about exposition here you get retards asking retared questions in exposition heavy show like recreators from this season then imagine how lost they would be with a normal show. They need to be handholded all the way to the end or they get lost.

This is the most insightful thing I've ever read here.

That's because anime is for kids and manchildren, more news at 11

It's for an effect.

"show don't tell" is probably one of the most retarded "rules" in history.

>visual medium
>nah m8 just tell them everything that's going on in awkward dialogue

It's a narrative style.

youtube.com/watch?v=OiTYAmXkWFc

I think it's supposed to come off as comedic most of the time, or push how serious a situation is. Unfortunately, it instead tends to come off as obnoxious and unnecessary. And yes, nips suck at writing, though you can blame a lot of that on their simplistic, childish language.

"show dont tell" is a narrative tool thats helpful, avoiding repeating the same information is the rule. You can tell something, but you cant show something and also narrate it just so the 6y old readers can keep up.
Youjo senki LN is absolutely horrid at this, the author writes same thing maybe 2-3 times essentially wasting the readers time. Its enough to make you drop the novel when encountered.

>thinking visual mediums shouldn't use the VISUAL aspect to show what is happening, and instead tell us

The whole point of a visual medium is showing over telling.

See Narration is for style, not for information dumps.

> You can tell something, but you cant show something and also narrate it

Lot of shows do it and it works very well.

That's obviously not true, they can go either way.

Sounds like you either exclusively watch shit anime, or would rather read light novels.

I'd have the narrator in Kaiji narrate my life if I could.
>Man, I hate being stuck in traffic
>KUYASHII

What did we learn? It's preference, not a rule.

Well, just think about anything in those same manga that doesn't get explained, nobody knows what happened and it becomes debated forever or just entirely forgotten when it was probably meant to be specific

That said, generally, I think in a lot of manga it's because they are trying to be an entry point into something (usually a sport or hobby) so you need characters narrating it so people know the theories being expressed...anime keeps those details because if they didn't, something like a sports anime would be a single episode for 50 chapters

It's not a bad guideline to follow, but it gets thrown around too much because it's one of the only things the layman "knows" about writing.

...

>light novels
Yet another EOP retard that doesn't understand what LN means and thinks his opinion on things he can't read is worth anything.

>all these plebs itt

It's because you're watching cartoons for 12 year olds.