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Battle for Dream Island (BFDI) is an animated web series on YouTube created by Chinese-American twin brothers Cary and Michael Huang. As the series has over 1.8 billion total views, [a] you may be surprised that Wikipedia does not have an article for this series.
A2: Wikipedians are not "biased" against BFDI. The creation of a Battle for Dream Island article is simply not allowed because the topic lacks notability and overly enthusiastic fans have repeatedly recreated it despite consensus favoring its deletion.
If bfdi is not allowed on wikipedia since it currently has no reliable sources. Then shouldn’t this essay be deleted?, this essay has the same amount of reliability as bfdi’s sources, which resulted to it’s deletion, speaking of the fact, there is a space in the essay where it explains bfdi (as an unreliable source) which means it doesn’t belong on wikipedia, if it is on this essay ...
bfdi's effect on independent animation is undeniable and it not even getting mentioned in its article because of the lack of reliable sources covering which is a little odd to me as bfdi is mentioned in tomska's article because of a single cameo 207.235.149.135 20:31, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
It is only a handful of BFDI fans who are both visible and bold enough to try to promote BFDI on Wikipedia. Just to reiterate, we do not "hate" BFDI, but shoehorning non-notable topics is generally frowned upon by the Wikipedia community. AlphaBeta135 talk 00:36, 1 September 2023 (UTC)
When the censorship is removed for overseas release, the basic animation underneath is revealed, leading to concerns over the sexualization of children in those markets. [ 2 ] Cowboy Bebop and Gantz are examples of titles that received edited broadcasts and were later released as unedited home releases.
Banned by LPF (Film Censorship Board of Malaysia) due to sensitive and mature content. [52] 2019 Dha Dha 87: 2019 90 ML: 2019 Hustlers: Initially scheduled to be released on 19 September 2019, but the film's local distributor suddenly called off the press preview screening a day before.
The "Rude Removal" segment was produced during the second season of Dexter's Laboratory in 1997, [3] and features a seven-minute runtime. It was directed by Rob Renzetti and storyboarded by Chong Lee and Craig McCracken, the latter of whom did confirm that he never had a copy, and neither did creator Genndy Tartakovsky.