Reincarnated as a Slime â Are the alphabets in the end credits real?
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The end credits for the anime series That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime have a unique trait which I am trying to understand. Here is a capture from the end credits of episode 2:
(The end credits of episode 1 are actually the opening credits which had not been played up until the end. The opening credits are entirely in Japanese except with an overlay of the series' English title.)
The image captures a transition between the first alphabet shown and the second. Each of the first two alphabets lasts for less than a second, when finally Japanese shows up for a few seconds. Originally I thought the first language was Thai or Georgian or some similar-appearing language. Now that I have done the screen capture, I'm pretty sure that neither of the first two are real writing systems. Are they?
If not, is there some in game reason to show the credits in three alphabets? I get that theirs is a multicultural world, but so is ours, and we typically stick to one language in credits.
(I guess I should qualify that. A number of different anime series will show multiple languages during the credits, but not transition between them. If a Korean staff is being credited, that portion will be in Korean, If Filipino staff then that portion will be in English or Spanish, etc.)
reincarnated-as-a-slime
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up vote
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down vote
favorite
The end credits for the anime series That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime have a unique trait which I am trying to understand. Here is a capture from the end credits of episode 2:
(The end credits of episode 1 are actually the opening credits which had not been played up until the end. The opening credits are entirely in Japanese except with an overlay of the series' English title.)
The image captures a transition between the first alphabet shown and the second. Each of the first two alphabets lasts for less than a second, when finally Japanese shows up for a few seconds. Originally I thought the first language was Thai or Georgian or some similar-appearing language. Now that I have done the screen capture, I'm pretty sure that neither of the first two are real writing systems. Are they?
If not, is there some in game reason to show the credits in three alphabets? I get that theirs is a multicultural world, but so is ours, and we typically stick to one language in credits.
(I guess I should qualify that. A number of different anime series will show multiple languages during the credits, but not transition between them. If a Korean staff is being credited, that portion will be in Korean, If Filipino staff then that portion will be in English or Spanish, etc.)
reincarnated-as-a-slime
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
The end credits for the anime series That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime have a unique trait which I am trying to understand. Here is a capture from the end credits of episode 2:
(The end credits of episode 1 are actually the opening credits which had not been played up until the end. The opening credits are entirely in Japanese except with an overlay of the series' English title.)
The image captures a transition between the first alphabet shown and the second. Each of the first two alphabets lasts for less than a second, when finally Japanese shows up for a few seconds. Originally I thought the first language was Thai or Georgian or some similar-appearing language. Now that I have done the screen capture, I'm pretty sure that neither of the first two are real writing systems. Are they?
If not, is there some in game reason to show the credits in three alphabets? I get that theirs is a multicultural world, but so is ours, and we typically stick to one language in credits.
(I guess I should qualify that. A number of different anime series will show multiple languages during the credits, but not transition between them. If a Korean staff is being credited, that portion will be in Korean, If Filipino staff then that portion will be in English or Spanish, etc.)
reincarnated-as-a-slime
The end credits for the anime series That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime have a unique trait which I am trying to understand. Here is a capture from the end credits of episode 2:
(The end credits of episode 1 are actually the opening credits which had not been played up until the end. The opening credits are entirely in Japanese except with an overlay of the series' English title.)
The image captures a transition between the first alphabet shown and the second. Each of the first two alphabets lasts for less than a second, when finally Japanese shows up for a few seconds. Originally I thought the first language was Thai or Georgian or some similar-appearing language. Now that I have done the screen capture, I'm pretty sure that neither of the first two are real writing systems. Are they?
If not, is there some in game reason to show the credits in three alphabets? I get that theirs is a multicultural world, but so is ours, and we typically stick to one language in credits.
(I guess I should qualify that. A number of different anime series will show multiple languages during the credits, but not transition between them. If a Korean staff is being credited, that portion will be in Korean, If Filipino staff then that portion will be in English or Spanish, etc.)
reincarnated-as-a-slime
reincarnated-as-a-slime
asked 5 hours ago
RichF
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1,5543930
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1 Answer
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Looks like an original alphabet, possibly based on runic alphabet. However, it is a complete alphabet with known transliteration.
解èªÂãÂÂãªã£@happymaryheart tweeted his work on the complete transliteration of the alphabet.
Based on transliteration samples he tweeted, it's basically either:
English words, or- Romanization of Japanese words
As for why the credits are shown in three alphabets... it's actually only shown in two alphabets: this runic alphabet and Japanese/English. The runes are shown for the first time, then they shrink before being replaced by the original words.
As for why it's done this way... I haven't done any researches for this, but I'd speculate on artistic impression, or perhaps it's actually the only alphabet in their universe...
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
Looks like an original alphabet, possibly based on runic alphabet. However, it is a complete alphabet with known transliteration.
解èªÂãÂÂãªã£@happymaryheart tweeted his work on the complete transliteration of the alphabet.
Based on transliteration samples he tweeted, it's basically either:
English words, or- Romanization of Japanese words
As for why the credits are shown in three alphabets... it's actually only shown in two alphabets: this runic alphabet and Japanese/English. The runes are shown for the first time, then they shrink before being replaced by the original words.
As for why it's done this way... I haven't done any researches for this, but I'd speculate on artistic impression, or perhaps it's actually the only alphabet in their universe...
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
Looks like an original alphabet, possibly based on runic alphabet. However, it is a complete alphabet with known transliteration.
解èªÂãÂÂãªã£@happymaryheart tweeted his work on the complete transliteration of the alphabet.
Based on transliteration samples he tweeted, it's basically either:
English words, or- Romanization of Japanese words
As for why the credits are shown in three alphabets... it's actually only shown in two alphabets: this runic alphabet and Japanese/English. The runes are shown for the first time, then they shrink before being replaced by the original words.
As for why it's done this way... I haven't done any researches for this, but I'd speculate on artistic impression, or perhaps it's actually the only alphabet in their universe...
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
Looks like an original alphabet, possibly based on runic alphabet. However, it is a complete alphabet with known transliteration.
解èªÂãÂÂãªã£@happymaryheart tweeted his work on the complete transliteration of the alphabet.
Based on transliteration samples he tweeted, it's basically either:
English words, or- Romanization of Japanese words
As for why the credits are shown in three alphabets... it's actually only shown in two alphabets: this runic alphabet and Japanese/English. The runes are shown for the first time, then they shrink before being replaced by the original words.
As for why it's done this way... I haven't done any researches for this, but I'd speculate on artistic impression, or perhaps it's actually the only alphabet in their universe...
Looks like an original alphabet, possibly based on runic alphabet. However, it is a complete alphabet with known transliteration.
解èªÂãÂÂãªã£@happymaryheart tweeted his work on the complete transliteration of the alphabet.
Based on transliteration samples he tweeted, it's basically either:
English words, or- Romanization of Japanese words
As for why the credits are shown in three alphabets... it's actually only shown in two alphabets: this runic alphabet and Japanese/English. The runes are shown for the first time, then they shrink before being replaced by the original words.
As for why it's done this way... I haven't done any researches for this, but I'd speculate on artistic impression, or perhaps it's actually the only alphabet in their universe...
answered 35 mins ago
Aki Tanaka
7,62152981
7,62152981
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