i care for mal
if many people likes something then it should have good content and the vice versa is also true
can't deny thatArgumentum ad populum - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
I don’t recall there being a boom because of more shows being made around that time (actually, you can still look at MAL season listings from back then and the number of shows being about the same). I do recall Crunchyroll making anime more mainstream around 2013 thanks to shows like SAO and Attack on Titan. After that, Netflix and Funimation stepped up their game on the shows they licensed.I mainly use MAL for logging stuff, I love logging whatever I watch or read or play across media.
I also think it's a great way to discover anime pre-2012 because anime being very low in number back then meant it'd get filtered out quickly and people were also not that generous with how they rated anime.
Post 2012 and the anime boom a lot of factors come into play: popularity contests, remotely good adaptations from manga getting rave scores and a slightly subpar adaptation getting harsher scores, sequels and successive seasons getting a huge jump in score more often than not and worst of all the yardstick for original anime being really high.
So it's a great way to gauge what's popular right now and maybe a general consensus for recent anime but definitely not the end or be all.
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