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Unpopular Opinions

Grzesiek11

Aspiring Fan
Aug 6, 2025
41
21
Poland
grzesiek11.stary.pc.pl
The Japanese fandom and the English fandom don't have to be the same. Japanese people use vocalo (NOT Vocaloid) to mean vocalsynth, so they *are* making a distinction. We have an English word for vocalsynth, we can use it.
Here's an unpopular opinion. "Vocalsynth" is a lame word. Lowercase "vocaloid" is much better sounding, and genericized trademarks are nothing new. Yamaha also holds the trademark to「ボカロ」btw so this is not at all different to using the word "vocaloid" in English, it's just more common to shorten words in this way in Japanese. I wouldn't be opposed to using the word "vocalo" either, it sounds pretty sweet as well. Anything but "vocalsynth".

I'm convinced the word "vocalsynth" was invented by the Big English Speaking Community as a way to continue selling Teto Is Not A Vocaloid to new fans.
 

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Resonance47
Apr 22, 2021
316
Thinking about it, I actually prefer using more (not entirely) genre-specific voicebanks to more general tone voicebanks. With genre-specific ones, I can easily know if a voicebank will sound good with the song, I don't have to test anything regarding tone. But general ones? I can't really find a use for them! My best examples are Meiko vs Luka (v4x) English. Luka English has a general pop-adjacent tone, while Meiko is clearly geared towards light pop and ballads. When I look for songs for Meiko, I can easily think of songs that fit her niche, but with Luka? I have no idea! She, along with a lot of other voicebanks, is so general that I simply have no idea what to use her for! Why would I use a general voice that'll get the job done when I can use a voice that fits this niche? I might be rambling, so please tell me if this is incomprehensible and I will do my best to explain.
Vocaloid English are quite troublesome because how their unintuitive phonetic structure and quite hard to get vocaloid english to sound good or Pronounce/Accent right. Which is completely opposite to the Synth V English bank that are much more mature and more friendly to edit. You might not believe what i say but this alone contributes such a huge impact of how english voicebank will "end-up" sound like. Just simply easy to edit can make a Night/Day difference for a singing performance.
Singing range and tempo range is just a "suggestion" and should be treated as such, most VBs can be push far beyone the limit before it sound like a noise.
Honestly anything will sound like a beeping sawtooth wave if push unreasonably excessive.

There is always some unwanted / leftover weird noise when exports. Some VBs are doing excellent, some are doing poorly. So what came out from any singing synth engine are not absolute. This is where mixing stage are for.
 
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sunnyp4rk

stuck in the computer
Jan 23, 2020
509
20
Midwest US (hell)
I'm convinced the word "vocalsynth" was invented by the Big English Speaking Community as a way to continue selling Teto Is Not A Vocaloid to new fans.
Or maybe people use it because there are multiple vocal synths now? Are you also bothered by the fact that Teto is Literally Not a Vocaloid? She was never released on Vocaloid, and a concept voicebank does not count.

There's no point in using Vocaloid to describe every vsynth when it's not the only one anymore. It would be weird to call SynthV characters Vocaloids unless they're actually on Vocaloid. I think that separation is a good thing actually.

Vsynth is the perfect term because it describes what these pieces of software are, but it doesn't describe them with a specific brand name. I'm not going to call UTAUs Vocaloids unless they actually are on Vocaloid, like with GekiKaze V6 and Ooka Miko and her upcoming Vocaloid6 voicebank. I could call them Vocaloids because they're actually on there.

I would think vsynth is an easier term for new fans to understand, rather than calling everything Vocaloid.
 

MagicalMiku

♡Miku♡
Apr 13, 2018
3,441
Sapporo
It's an interesting fact for both the fan community and the companies: Crypton, for example, on their blog and twitter often refers to them as Piapro Characters or virtual singers, but when is another character from, let's say Internet Co, they write something like "Gumi from Internet Co.", and if necessary, adds more details about the voicebank engine used for the song or the artwork.
Virtual singers is also the "official term" used for Project Sekai, and it's interesting that on Sonicwire official shop, all Piapro Characters (both Vocaloid and NT) are listed as "virtual instruments".
How about on Yamaha Vocaloid website? Well, there is another term, voice bank:
Voice Banks are libraries used in the VOCALOID Editor to synthesize singing voices. Choose your favorite character from over 100 different characters.
 

Grzesiek11

Aspiring Fan
Aug 6, 2025
41
21
Poland
grzesiek11.stary.pc.pl
tfw you post an actually unpopular opinion in the unpopular opinions thread

Are you also bothered by the fact that Teto is Literally Not a Vocaloid?
No, I'm bothered by the fact apparently everyone in the English speaking community loves to correct people when they call [insert voice not on the VOCALOID™ engine] a "vocaloid".

There's no point in using Vocaloid to describe every vsynth when it's not the only one anymore.
Why? It's a better sounding word than "vocalsynth". Also vocaloid* not Vocaloid.

It would be weird to call SynthV characters Vocaloids unless they're actually on Vocaloid.
Why? It's perfectly normal for trademarks to become genericized. List of generic and genericized trademarks - Wikipedia

I think that separation is a good thing actually.
Why? Engines only matter when discussing engines. Most of the time, you are not discussing engines.

Virtual singers is also the "official term" used for Project Sekai [...]
Oh wow I forgot about that, this might actually be worse than "vocalsynth" because it's also independently used to describe what you could describe as "singing VTubers" (obviously there are normal VTubers that sing, but this is kinda a separate category, from what I understand), which is a pretty much unrelated phenomenon. バーチャルシンガー - Wikipedia
 
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sunnyp4rk

stuck in the computer
Jan 23, 2020
509
20
Midwest US (hell)
Why? It's a better sounding word than "vocalsynth". Also vocaloid* not Vocaloid.
Well I'll be petty now and use the proper official spelling of VOCALOID now because you want to correct that. Also, it's not a matter of "what word sounds the prettiest" its "what word can convey what a vocal synthesizer is the best". yes VOCALOID was the standard for ages but it's not anymore. Vocal synth literally means vocal synthesizer. VOCALOID doesn't actually mean that. It's just the ENGINE name.

Why? Engines only matter when discussing engines. Most of the time, you are not discussing engines.
I mean, I specifically do discuss engines. Macne Nana is a VOCALOID and UTAU because she was on both engines. If she wasn't on VOCALOID, I wouldn't call her a VOCALOID.

I'm not going to be like "oh hell yeah my favorite VOCALOID chis-a!" because she was never ON VOCALOID. It doesn't make sense. Like I think lumping every single character into the term VOCALOID would make it more confusing for me if I was a new fan, because not every character is on VOCALOID.

edit: I'm sure there are probably people in the Japanese speaking sphere of the fandom who are also just as picky about stuff like this. It's just not something you'd see unless you were in that sphere. I don't think its only Big English Fandom that would be super focused on correct terminology if you looked around.
 
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MagicalMiku

♡Miku♡
Apr 13, 2018
3,441
Sapporo
I think most of the confusion of the users come from how and where they learn about the characters.
Let's say that most of users know about Miku, Teto, or any other popular character, from Project Diva (there is Teto's extra DLC), from official concerts, or from popular songs available online.
If a user knows from Project Diva or Project Sekai, probably will think that Sega is actually behind all of those characters. Which, to be honest, is someway true: Sega holds all the rights of Miku games on all platforms, developed by Sega and other companies. Sega also is responsible for making the concerts, with its company Marza Animation Planet. And Sega designed many of the original modules for both Diva and Sekai (others were based on official illustrations/song or Piapro art contest).
Now, I feel there are two kinds of user: user n.1 likes those songs and characters, but not so much by investigating more about them. They are Vocaloids made by Sega. Yes, that's it. But for user n.2 things are different: will research more about them, on official websites, wiki, and so on, and will understand the various differences, the different engines made by different companies, why Crypton has both Vocaloid and NT, why Teto, IA and Gumi have different outfits for different engines. And will learn about new characters. So it's ok and a good thing to correct new fans, especially if it's user n.2 type.
Vsynth sounds very good (and technical), vocaloid of course is more iconic. With so many different engines available now, I usually just say [character]+[engine], is just easier for me. For example, Miku V6 or Miku NT2, or if I want to compare some of her previous VB (voicebanks), I say Miku NT (which can still be used, if you have the installer), Miku SP (Super Pack), Miku V3, Append, ..
I think Yamaha, Crypton and the other companies should translate some of the books that are available in Japan and that can explain very well the history of voice banks.:una_lili:
 

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Resonance47
Apr 22, 2021
316
I honestly don't really care what people gonna call it he, she, it or vsynth, vocal synth, VBs voicebanks, vocaloid, utau, cevio, synthv, or whatever. Because these are sub category.

I actually like when people call it vsynths / vocalsynths because it generalized and wrap them up together in the low processing fashion and that's what i call efficiency. But if people wanted to be more specific like talking about vocaloid engine, obviously they can use that sub category. I see no point to take things like a brickwall limiter. From an information-processing perspective, using "vocal synth" as the umbrella term is efficient because it avoids unnecessary classification until classification becomes useful. That's basically how taxonomy works in most fields.

Honestly.... Some VBs have multiple version across engine. Zundamon for example.. She's already exist in these engine likeUTAU, VOICEVOX, NEUTRINO, VOICEPEAK, Seiren Voice, CeVIO AI, VoiSona and god knows many more in the future...

So when people talking about Zundamon but which zundamon? As you can see..... this is where sub catagory are very useful. Where discussions often become unproductive is when people treat the subcategory as if it's the primary identity.
Example: "Teto isn't a vocal synth, she's an UTAU." But UTAU is the software platform. Teto is still part of the broader vocal synthesis ecosystem.
So Use "vocal synths" term when discussing the ecosystem as a whole.

So basically.
- Use "vocal synth" when discussing the ecosystem as a whole.
- Use the specific engine when the technical distinction matters.
In my opinion it's fairly sensible way to communicate because it minimizes unnecessary detail while still allowing precision when needed. The existence of characters like Zundamon across UTAU, VOICEVOX, NEUTRINO, VOICEPEAK, CeVIO AI, VoiSona, and future engines is actually a good example of why both levels of classification are useful rather than mutually exclusive.

This is my opinion though, agree and disagree are also opened for discussion.
I believe that neither position is inherently wrong. They're optimizing for different things like simplicity versus precision. The real question is whether the distinction changes the meaning of the conversation. If it doesn't, the broader term usually works fine. If it does, the subcategory becomes valuable.
 

Grzesiek11

Aspiring Fan
Aug 6, 2025
41
21
Poland
grzesiek11.stary.pc.pl
Well I'll be petty now and use the proper official spelling of VOCALOID now because you want to correct that.
The point is that using the official (or uppercase-first) spelling is wrong, as the word I think is best to use for the broader category of vocal synthesizers is "vocaloid". Specifically lowercase, because it's not the name of any specific engine.

VOCALOID™ - a specific vocal synthesizer engine made by Yamaha
vocaloid - some vocal synthesizer

Also, it's not a matter of "what word sounds the prettiest" its "what word can convey what a vocal synthesizer is the best".
Words convey meaning by existing and being used, not by what specific letters or other words they are made of.

I mean, I specifically do discuss engines. Macne Nana is a VOCALOID and UTAU because she was on both engines. If she wasn't on VOCALOID, I wouldn't call her a VOCALOID.
When discussing engines, in which way you use the word "vocaloid"/"VOCALOID™" is clear from the context.

"The recent vocaloid song by XXX featuring IA" (even if it's the CeVIO voicebank)
"The recent vocaloid song by XXX featuring IA V3" (it's definitely not the CeVIO voicebank now)
"IA recently got a new VOCALOID™ voicebank" (clearly you mean the VOCALOID™ engine, even if you are speaking out loud or write everything in lowercase)
"She's a vocaloid producer" (maybe using SynthV)
"She produces songs using VOCALOID™" (now definitely not using SynthV)

What do you think of the words "photoshop" and "google"? Is it weird and confusing if I've "photoshopped" an image with GIMP, or "googled" something outside Google? Would the word "immanipped" be better, because it combines the parts of "image" and "manipulate"?

The phrases "vocal synthesizer" and "image manipulation" are normal phrases to be used in professional contexts, but that doesn't mean "vocaloid" and "photoshop" are worse than "vocalsynth" and "immanip" in a casual context.

That said, I agree the distinction between the broad "vocalsynth"/"vocaloid" category and the subcategories of specific engines is often useful, and I'm not trying to argue that it isn't. My point was that I don't think it's important that the name of the broader category must be completely separate, though I guess I didn't get it across very well.
 
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