it's going to air Saturday and Tuesday officially on bilibili and YouTube
No, I referred to the following commnent: "Because the first episode, released on 7th October, received so much criticism, especially for the dubbing, the creators decided to delete it, revise it as well as the whole series, and release a new version of episode 1 on November 15, and also the rest of the episodes that were never released."
This was a more detailed explanation of my statement that the series Gu Jin Nan Qiu did not end.
it's going to air Saturday and Tuesday officially on bilibili and YouTube
As far as I know, they haven't announced whether some episodes will be behind a paywall. I guess that some of them will not be free because their previous series is partly behind the paywall on YouTube and fully behind a paywall on Bilibili.
The series did not end. For more information, see my other comment. As for they days, I can only speculate. I guess that, because it is a small company, they need some time to do work between episode releases, which is why they don’t want to release the next episode the following day.
Didn‘t this drama already started? Why does the date shows 15th November. I know that the drama started 7th…
Because the first episode, released on 7th October, received so much criticism, especially for the dubbing, the creators decided to delete it, revise it as well as the whole series, and release a new version of episode 1 on November 15, and also the rest of the episodes that were never released.
No, because the release schedule on the official Instagram account also lists a preview of a new episode on November 13. kisskh (MDL) relies only on verified information, and the first official release schedule ended on November 14, showing only four episodes and the preview. The number of episodes cannot be updated on MDL before a new official release schedule for the upcoming weeks is published.
To clarify, in case you made a typo, the official release on Bilibili consists of 40 separate episodes, with each…
It was my pleasure. I was also surprised when I heard this. Yes, it is. I hope that they will use music by real people in their future productions. If you are still their subscriber on Bilibili, you should express your opinion to them. They are responsive to feedback when it comes from paying members.
To clarify, in case you made a typo, the official release on Bilibili consists of 40 separate episodes, with each…
Hello! As far as I know, all the songs were created for this series using AI, so they haven’t been released or used anywhere else. However, I think they plan to release the OST as a membership benefit on YouTube and/or their own upcoming platform in the future.
Tried to watch it the best i could on bilibili with episodes being blocked together to 20m clips but they left…
To clarify, in case you made a typo, the official release on Bilibili consists of 40 separate episodes, with each episode being around 2 minutes long. After each episode, there are ending credits and music that can vary in length and may last up to around 3 minutes. There are no compilations consisting of multiple episodes on Bilibili.
For the YouTube release, they divided the story into three parts (1–10, 11–20, 21–40), and each part has the ending credits and music only once. They plan to release the series also on their own upcoming platform, scheduled to launch in October. There has been no information on how the series will be released on their own platform.
As for possible reasons for the original release style, they propably wanted to maximize the revenue from the monthly subscriptions. With the used release schedule, watching the series as it airs required subscribing to the channel for three months instead of the required one month if the series had aired as a single movie or compilation.
As I watched the new episodes right after they aired, I enjoyed the ending credits. They prompted me to reflect on the themes and events of the episode I had just seen, rather than immediately starting to do something else right after the episode ended. However, I understand that watching it after it has aired is different because knowing the next episode is available can make one impatient to see how the story continues.
This was a more detailed explanation of my statement that the series Gu Jin Nan Qiu did not end.
The series did not end. For more information, see my other comment. As for they days, I can only speculate. I guess that, because it is a small company, they need some time to do work between episode releases, which is why they don’t want to release the next episode the following day.
For the YouTube release, they divided the story into three parts (1–10, 11–20, 21–40), and each part has the ending credits and music only once. They plan to release the series also on their own upcoming platform, scheduled to launch in October. There has been no information on how the series will be released on their own platform.
As for possible reasons for the original release style, they propably wanted to maximize the revenue from the monthly subscriptions. With the used release schedule, watching the series as it airs required subscribing to the channel for three months instead of the required one month if the series had aired as a single movie or compilation.
As I watched the new episodes right after they aired, I enjoyed the ending credits. They prompted me to reflect on the themes and events of the episode I had just seen, rather than immediately starting to do something else right after the episode ended. However, I understand that watching it after it has aired is different because knowing the next episode is available can make one impatient to see how the story continues.