I'm not surprised. I noticed several boys/tomboys who read or watched Tokyo Mew Mew, but refused to give Sailor Moon a chance. It makes me wonder why Sailor Moon would look "too girly" on the outside for people who didn't give it a chance at the time. I know Tokyo Mew Mew has the animals aspect...
This makes me wonder how Sailor Moon could look "too girly" on the outside, because the person I saw on Twitter who was a tomboy growing up said she never watched Sailor Moon because she thought it looked "too girly" and didn't give it a chance as a kid. She watched other shows with a female...
I remember seeing a girl who was a tomboy on Twitter saying she didn't watch Sailor Moon back then because "it looked girly", but she watched Tokyo Mew Mew because of the animal powers
It depends on what you mean by girly I know, since there's different kinds of it
I mainly ask this because I once asked some people if they think Sailor Moon or Tokyo Mew Mew is more girly and I remember getting more people saying Sailor Moon is more girly in comparison
I'm surprised that Sailor Moon was aimed at 4 to 12 year olds, which includes preschoolers
I think that's because The Powerpuff Girls' target audience was 6 to 11 year olds
I ask this, because I saw a post on Twitter where someone mentioned going to a panel where Junichi Sato was at and Sato said the show was aimed towards preschoolers and I have a hard time believing that the 90s anime was aimed at preschoolers 3 to 5
To be fair, this was only a couple of people I saw online, but there were people that didn't want to watch Sailor Moon or something because they thought it was too "girly", yet watched/read and enjoyed Mew Mew. Was that hypocritical?
For some reason, I feel more "girly" watching Sailor Moon than I do Tokyo Mew Mew and I mean this in a good way
I think it's because the transformations having stuff like ribbons (Mew Mew didn't add them until the reboot). Sailor Moon also felt like it had a more magical feeling. Most of the...