Talk:Extracurricular/@comment-58.7.185.207-20140906113806/@comment-4010415-20140925210959

I definitely see your point. Indeed, RWBY doesn't seem to have the best writing going on, and it's boring and a turnoff for some people. Others enjoy RWBY despite that, but that doesn't mean anyone is wrong for liking or disliking it. Different likes and dislikes is what makes the world go 'round.

Hell, I got incredibly bored of Inuyasha, but there are people who watched it all the way through and loved it. I eventually figured out that the reason why I had gotten bored of it was because it was the same exact thing over and over: Random adventures, maybe they find a jewel shard, maybe they run into Naraku, they defeat Naraku but he's not dead, more random adventures, maybe they find a jewel shard, Naraku shows up like "Whatup bitches, I'm still not dead," they defeat him but he's still not dead, etc.

I think the opening narration of RWBY was intended to help us understand the setting rather than tell us where the story was going, to be honest. And the grimm may have been seen as more dangerous back before humanity discovered dust. That, and the grimm near the kingdoms may be less dangerous than the grimm out in the wilderness away from the kingdoms because hunters keep the grimm nearest to the kingdoms in check. We've seen that grimm can become larger, so maybe there are much older, larger, and stronger grimm in the wilderness.