I´ve been looking for a chart similar to the image (a compass and a spectrum), that i´ve seen in /b/ and /v/ but about otaku culture (but i forgot to save), which included images like socially accepted japanese games and traditional culture on the right, and in the left weeb and otaku things, visual novels, and so on. Sry for my english
somebody has that image, or at least, similar images? ty
>>315981
>>316602
>Gunpla
>High level weeaboo
Seriously? Gundam is one of the most beloved entry level anime out there and holds the highest market for plastic modeling by a loooooong shot.
This?
>>316602
That`s it, thank u so much
>>316637
Yeah, and lots of normies like going to the newest Marvel movie, but REALLY engaging in comic book lore and collecting is on another level
>>316637
...and how many people make the jump from "watching gundam" to "going out and buying plastic toy robots, folded-9000-times sidecutters, super-special gundam pens, and official gundam paint, then putting together a toy robot, painting it, and exhibiting it somewhere in their house (presumably as part of a collection to somewhat offset the astronomical cost of all the paints and pens)"?
You knew what "gunpla" meant, right?
>>317271
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plastic_model
Plastic modeling is a thing that's old enough to have been your grandpa's hobby. It's not niche in the slightest.
Although based on that spergy rant of yours and the tasteless pic you posted, I can easily see why some of your colleagues would mis-interpret Gundam as a dumb weeb thing where most people just see cool battle robots.
>>317303
I'm not sure what planet you live on, but on Earth, plastic models have always been for nerds, even before they were models of nerdy robots.