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    1. PuzzleheadedRun1595 on

      Yes it is popular and while I can’t talk for everyone, personally as a book fanatic (movies weren’t it for me, they left out so many important stuff bruh), I’m super excited as it’s evident they are sticking close to the source material as promised.

    2. nick_defiler on

      I’m 29 and I have a weird love hate relationship with Harry Potter. I grew up on it had the first two movies on VHS, my mom read me the first three books before sleep, then I picked them up myself. So yeah, it’s part of my brain at this point.
      But the older I get, the more I see how messy it is. It really feels like Rowling didn’t fully plan where the story was going after the first book or two. Early on it’s more like self contained school mysteries, then suddenly you get massive lore dumps later. The Deathly Hallows being introduced basically at the end as this super important myth is the biggest example it just doesn’t feel earned.
      Same with time travel. The whole Time-Turner thing is cool in one book, but it breaks the logic of the entire world if you think about it for more than 5 minutes, so it just quietly disappears later.
      I still love the atmosphere, characters, and that whole growing up with the series feeling, but yeah… the structure is kinda all over the place.
      Also funny side note: in early school I was literally called a satanist because of Harry Potter. Back then a lot of parents and teachers treated anything with magic like it was some kind of actual devil stuff. By 6th grade it expanded to Harry Potter, LOTR, and metal music so yeah, full package. You show up with a fantasy book or listen to heavy riffs and suddenly you’re corrupted.
      Honestly hoping the new series fixes some of this seed the big ideas earlier, make the lore tighter, and may handle things like time travel in a way that doesn’t break the logic.

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