Commercial application Moe characters have expanded within the Japanese media market. In 2003, the market for
moe media such as printed media, video, and games was worth 88 billion yen; roughly one-third of the estimated 290 billion yen
otaku market in Japan. In 2009, Brad Rice, editor-in-chief of
Japanator, said that "moe has literally become an economic force" saying that more products use some element of
moe in order to sell better. Rice also goes on to say that
moe is used to get anime and manga works out to "hardcore fans who buy excessive amounts of items related to the character of their desire."
John Oppliger from
AnimeNation traced the first decade of the 2000s as the time when
moe became increasingly popular and recognized. Commercialization was a result of interest that followed, and
moe evolved from being a non-sexual desire to being a sexually sublimated fascination with cuteness. Oppliger goes on to say that
moe shifted entirely from an interchange between character and viewer, to a focused fetish of viewers. Examples used by Oppliger include the series;
K-On,
Lucky Star, and
Moetan where he points out they are "revolved around adorable, whimsical, clumsy, early-adolescent girl characters in order to evoke, enflame, and manipulate the interests and affections of viewers." Rather than evoking
moe feelings, they were literally
moe characters that had defining characteristics of the
moe style. Oppliger referred to these girl characters as "adorably cute, just a bit sexually appealing, and self-conscious but not yet cynical" going on to say that they demand notice and adoration, rather than passively earning it. With
moe anthropomorphism,
moe characteristics are applied to give human elements to non-human objects. The
Gradius video game series features a spaceship named
Vic Viper. For a spin-off game,
moe is applied to
Vic Viper to create
Otomedius.
Sexual attraction Sometimes feelings of
moe towards fictional characters include "
sexual excitement", or are understood in the context where "lots of beautiful girls and boobs appear." In these cases, feelings of pure affection that gradually become stronger over time can lead to these feelings of
eroticism.
Queer theorist Yuu Matsuura says that sexual desire oriented to such characters differs from a desire toward humans.
Moe, however, is also considered to be distinct from pure lust. While small amounts of lust is generally considered
moe, a feeling that focuses too heavily on lust is considered outside the scope of
moe.
Contests Several informal contests or rankings for characters considered to be
moe exist on the Internet. One such contest is the
Anime Saimoe Tournament, organized by members of the textboard
2channel, which ran every year from 2002, until its cancellation after the 2014 contest due to declining interest.
Moe characters from the
fiscal year starting 1 July and ending 30 June the following year were eligible. Each tournament had at least 280
moe characters. Spin-offs of the Saimoe Tournament include RPG Saimoe, which has video game characters, and SaiGAR, a competition between the "manliest men of anime". In 2006 and 2007, the Saimoe Tournament became an increasingly international event; 2channel users obliged foreign
otaku by putting up an English version of their rules page. The contest started in 2008 and was held annually. Initially, only female characters were eligible, a male exhibition tournament was added in 2011, which would take place after the end of the main tournament. It was made into an official tournament alongside the female characters in 2015. Moe contests also exist in magazine publications, and in the real world. The Moe Game Awards are given annually to
bishōjo games published that year in various categories, such as
background music,
character design,
fandisc,
graphics, and
erotic content. They were started in 2006 as the Bishōjo Game Awards, but their name was changed to Moe Game Awards in 2009. It is sponsored by the Japanese game rating board
Ethics Organization of Computer Software (EOCS) and is described by them as "an R18 game industry version of the
Academy Awards". Magazines that have
moe contests in them include the Japanese magazine
Dengeki Moeoh which runs a column called and features the top 10
moe characters of the month, as determined by reader votes. ==Commentary==