Believe it or not, there was a time when deviantART wasn't shit. Well, less shit than it is now.
Despite its well deserved infamy, the site was home to certain gems and communities that cannot be fostered elsewhere now. I remember back in the day browsing countless pieces of fan art for stuff like Pokemon, and then being led into to some truly amazing original art work with an
active community that actually responded worth a damn. More importantly, something worth wasting my time to comment on to express my joy. The site was not perfect by any stretch of the imagination, but it's a far cry from what hideous abomination the site has become now.
While I cannot comment much upon the site as a creator, seeing as I only ever posted a few shitty fanfics to it, I truly cannot express how much I
hate deviantART from a user end perspective. Eclipse UI was what killed my major usage of the site, a hideous abomination of black and green that just makes it a miserable experience to browse. Group function and favorite sorting was more or less gutted, hidden behind one too many layers of UI obfuscation just to sort and organize your work. Not to mention, the endless scrolling when it first came on.
And you want to know the funny part about that? I would be perfectly fine with endless scrolling it if worked on mobile. But for some goddamn reason, the site has it so you have to login in order to access it on mobile or desktop now. What you get as the end user when not logged in... Well, enjoy having max of 24 images you have to click through.
Besides all that, the hobbyist portion of the site more or less perished. It was dying long before Eclipse became a thing, but its implementation killed those communities and send them scurrying to other pastures. Which would be fine, except those pastures count for Twitter, or "professional" port folio websites like Art Station that are geared toward the more commercial side of things. As far as I can tell, there hasn't been a real replacement for the homey "community" aspect of dA. Another casualty of the endless march to Web 3.0 or whatever consolidation abomination that those in the tech world wishes to corral us into.
Being one example, I can cite other websites from my early days of browsing the web such as Smack Jeeves, a delightful home for amatuerish works of all sort. You name it, they probably had it. The Good, the Bad, the Cringe, take your pick. Despite that, there was a certain community fostered over the years that allowed a collection of works to flourish. It was a good repository for at least a couple decent web comics, but like with dA, it too became a victim of its own UI redesign thanks to being sold off and bought off by osme Mahwa Korean company that turned it into a glorified commercial portal for its own ends.
To put it simply, the site redesign incorporated inconvenience as a core factor, favoring mobile over the old desktop interface in trying to ape places like Webtoons and Tapas. The only problem with that was they their implementation of the features of those sites were even worse than was already had on those sites to begin with. Needless to say, the site was torpedoed to the extent that it suffered a mass exodus, and was dead within a year of its redesign.
To date, I have found no decent alternative to the site that had once been home to a good choice of comics, including one 40k one that had excellent art work and story that I have been unable to locate elsewhere. Closest I have been able to find is Comic Fury, but... I really don't need to explain their community, do I? It's okay enough for the stuff that was reuploaded, but everything else leaves much to be desired.
That's pretty much the story for a lot of my old haunts. Old management moves out for one reason or another, sells to some entity that revamps it into an abomination, the site withers and dies, and no replacement comes as those from that website consolidate even further into the abominations that are YouTube, Twitter, Reddit, and who knows what else. I can count on one hand the sites from that period when I first got online that are still around in their original forms, and even then they too are slowly withering away to the sands of time. What once was a life away from your "real" one has now been cooped into whatever hellscape that is the modern internet, and it is only going to get worse.
If there's one thing I regret, it was not having the foresight to archive even screenshots of the old stuff from those before times. I still have my favorites, but they are riddles with dead links that lead to nowhere. Only the fact their titles exist hint of what once existed. I've tried to archive what is left, but there's just so little that remains.
If I could tell my younger self one thing regarding the old stuff, it would be to get a 500gb external drive and start archiving anything and everything, no matter how inconsequential. It'd probably even last me a good while too, considering the file sizes for even YouTube videos back in the day weren't
that much. At most, it woud have been around 480p. Though how to download those videos in the days before YouTube-Dl, I have no idea. Probably FRAPS if it came down to it.
Well, I can at least save I have begun the process on my end to grabbing the shit from my old account. Just a word of warning to you guys, but YouTube seems to have started purging even the reference to deleted videos within your playlists. You can still access them through "Your Data in YouTube" and download your playlists history from there, but it's probably a prelude that they will probably go further in the times to come.
Also, if you have an old YouTube account dating before the YouTube forced in Google accounts with its old history, you can still see the old thumbnails and title for deleted videos in you history. I've archived the screenshots for those, and I suggest anyone in this thread to do the same if they still have those old accounts they have not logged into for a while. If nothing else, they at least record the existence of
who deleted those videos so you have some form of paper trail to try and locate copies or other archives.
Anyway, here's my thread tax for the day.
And of course, CrappyCaptureDevice.
Now this channel is a classic. He introduced me to a lot of old games from the 8 bit to the 32/64 bit era, a time before mine that seemed whimsical. Before the utter deluge of retro stuff we have in the gaming scene right now, videos like this was how I learned about those old systems.
Now the formula for a CrappyCaptureDevice video is simple. You show the history of a given character, their movesets, and then you show the games that they actually came from with accompanying gameplay with some text to explain it all. It's dead simple, but wonderfully effective and to the damned point. While there have been other similar videos explaining such history on bigger channels since then, they haven't been able to match the charm that CCD has with his execution. I watch his stuff from time to time, if only to marvel at how much effort it must have taken back then to capture the footage, edit it, and get it all in order. Those were some different times.
In any case, he's been gone from YouTube for over a decade and a half now. Wherever he is, I hope they're doing well. You made some wonderful days to entertain me getting back from school CCD.
Vomitsaw does not do much these days, but stumbling upon his work back in the day was a treat. It was my introduction to console modding, and boy did these videos light up the imagination. While there may have been other progenitors producing such similar stuff, Vomitsaw was the most well known of these creator. While I don't remember how I found him, I imagine it was probably through those fake PlayboxWiiStation360 videos that populated the site at the time. Regardless, it led me down a fascinating rabbithole of console modding which has led to its modern iteration today. I can't imagine the complexity involved, seeing as there wasn't much in terms of examples to follow. While his projects aren't too special today, being glorified reshellings of the original console inside a new box, they paved the way for others to follow to create their own console mods that we see today.
I can't imagine anyone doing it today with today's generation of consoles. Or even the future ones. They're just boring PC boxes at this point with inferior hardware. At least the Switch has some useful novelties to it, but I can't imagine you'd be able to do much for the console in terms of modding beyond the standard.
AMVs, a dead genre on YouTube on account for its draconian copyright system. You so much as even show a screesnhot, and you are liable to get a takedown or even a strike on your channel.
Now I did not get to see many AMVs back in the day, but I did have a few choice ones similar to this AMV. It was mostly centered around a few properties I was a fan of at the time, most of which has since been purged from the website with no backup archive I am aware of. Technically, they do exist as a screenshot on the WayBackMachine, but the videos themselves weren't archived. Amatuerish they may have been, they were a delight for a young dweller of stuff like this back in the day. Dare I say it, even wholesome in a way. Just plain fun being shared with what limits that Windows Movie Maker could muster.
I'm Blue.
My Sanctuary.
Crawling.
Just a few choice songs that served as the anthem for these videos. It was a different, freer time. A time for experimentation, of sharing ones own creative work without the stifling wall of TV to hold you back. A small sample in the new frontier of video entertainment, education, vlogging, journalism, and so much more.
If only it were the same these days, but times have changed. At least I still have those old memories.