Can I Request Corrections From Drake Scan Team?

2025-11-03 07:57:36 271

4 Answers

Felicity
Felicity
2025-11-06 08:51:06
You absolutely can — in most cases the Drake Scan team will accept correction requests if you’re polite and specific. I usually send a short message that includes chapter and page numbers plus a screenshot, and I point out the exact bubble or line that needs fixing. If I can, I include the corrected wording or a reference so they don’t have to hunt for it.

I’ve noticed teams react best to concise, friendly reports rather than long complaints. If they have a preferred feedback channel (Discord, website form, email), use that channel so your note doesn’t get lost. When they fix it, I like to say thanks — small courtesies go a long way, and it feels good seeing the corrected line in the next release.
Marcus
Marcus
2025-11-06 16:25:15
Generally speaking, yes — you can request corrections, though how you do it depends on the team’s setup. From my experience with similar scan groups, the most effective method is to present a tightly focused report: identify the release (volume/chapter), the exact page and bubble or line, and attach a clear screenshot. I prefer to explain why it’s wrong (typo, mistranslation, bad typesetting) and propose the exact corrected text. That gives maintainers less work and makes it easy to apply the change.

If the Drake Scan team has a GitHub repo, opening an issue or submitting a small patch is often the fastest, most transparent route. If they’re Discord-based, post in the feedback channel or DM a staff member, again with the same precise info. Be mindful of tone — volunteers do this for love and free time, so I always say thank you and avoid sounding demanding. When a fix is merged or the file updated, I usually drop a quick thanks; it’s a tiny gesture but it keeps the community warm and collaborative.
Zoe
Zoe
2025-11-07 06:17:52
Curious if you can ask the Drake Scan team to fix something? Yes — and you should, as long as you follow their process. I usually start by checking their rules or FAQ to see if they have a preferred channel: some groups prefer a specific email, a Discord server, a forum thread, or a comments section under the release. Find the exact spot of the issue (chapter, page, panel, line) and collect proof — a screenshot or a timestamped link — so you aren’t vague.

When I contact them I keep it short, polite, and precise: say what’s wrong, where it is, and suggest the correction if you can. Example: ‘Chapter 12, page 45, third bubble — line reads X but should be Y (source: official translation/scan).’ Don’t spam multiple channels; give them a reasonable time to respond, and follow up once if you don’t hear back. If they’re an open-source or GitHub-hosted project, a pull request or issue with a suggested fix is often the fastest route. I’ve seen polite, well-documented requests get handled quickly — it’s satisfying when a tiny correction makes the release feel that much cleaner.
Quinn
Quinn
2025-11-09 02:41:53
Yes — you can request corrections from the Drake Scan team, and I find that clarity and civility go a long way. Start by locating where they accept feedback: many groups put contact details in the release notes, on a Discord, or on their site. When I flag something, I give the chapter number, page, panel, and an attached screenshot so there’s no guessing. I write a one- or two-line suggested fix and cite the source if it’s a translation issue.

If they use a public issue tracker or GitHub, submitting a concise issue or pull request accelerates fixes. Otherwise a polite direct message or comment will usually do — just don’t flood them with the same message across five platforms. Be patient; volunteers handle a lot. For me, the key is being helpful, not accusatory, and expressing thanks when they patch it — people respond to respectful help and it keeps the community pleasant.
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