At 3/18/09 05:37 PM, Denvish wrote:
What the fuck is it with newbies saying 'I can't learn from tutorials'? I mean, shit, do they expect experienced flashers to spend their personal time on MSN/AIM etc talking them through every onion skin/semi-colon? Is it just an amazingly extreme form of laziness, to be able to look at step-by-step instructions and say 'I can't do that'? FFS
/end rant
True, preety damn true. There's a lot of knuckleheads that can't really focus into paying attention to a tutorial and bother everyone via PM asking for tips.
However, I'd be an hypocrite bitch if I said I didn't get frustrated A LOT of times while animating because my walking cycles wouldn't look good, it's just about trying over an over and over (now imagine I made it my copy/paste and wrote over and over a thousand times) and I believe it happens to everyone on almost everything, still, that doesn't mean it isn't anooying, but when that pisses you, the thing is that flash can be preety intimidating, specially for something who is just starting, so the person would get frustrated from tutorials. It happened to me thousands of times, good luck for experienced artists I was eleven when I started using flash, so I didn't even know Newgrounds, if not, lot's of people's inboxes would've been filled with thousands of PMs and IMs. At last I managed to get used to the whole thing by myself, but it took me some time. Now imagine the guy who is just starting, it is obvious that the first thing he does, he'll try to make it a true masterpiece and when he realises things aren't going the way he wants them, he'll immediatly want to get done with the animation, so he'll start bothering people over the many things he doesn't understand because he will just want it to be perfect, which is too much for a first try, but as somebody new, he just doesn't know how much experience, effort and passion he'll have to put into his animation.
In spite of what I've said, it's still true, he has no right to annoy somebody just because he is are too lazy to learn by himself, but it's not really his fault when you think of it...
Good observation indeed...