Anime/Manga - Discuss Japanese cartoons and comics here; NO CULTURE WAR DOOMPOSTING!

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The ending of Oreimo though.......yikes.
The part that always bugged me was that the blue haired model girl had literally the same personality as his sister and the same build as his sister. Like turning down the best girls (red headed game designer, childhood friend) is whatever, but you have two girls that are the same aside from hair color and you choose the one that you can't marry and makes you a social leper for the rest of your life.
 
I finished the last 3 episodes of Platinum End I was missing. Damn, that ending is so retarded that it's almost good.

In anime, what I heard is that incest is just an easy fantasy (a girl that you already know without need to approach) for otakus who don't have actual siblings to realize how disgusting it is.
They should know without needing to have siblings lol
 
Almost finished the new season of Baki, and of course I'm loving it. It's Baki, what can I say it's one of my absolute favorite pieces of literature in general.
The issues of the show aren't deal breakers but there's a few problems. You just can't animate Itagaki's art style, so a lot of the amazing panels just don't translate that well into the show. The manga is also paced in a very unique way that also does not translate over to anime. The manga will oftentimes have entire chapters between two moments in a fight. This works well because the fights are on physical, mental, philosophical, and sometimes spiritual grounds all at the same time and so it flows well. In anime, the only way to do that is to have the narrator interject with stuff and sometimes it feels rushed.
But overall the show does well with respecting the manga and doing a solid job with it given what they had to work with adapting an insane manga.
My boyfriend has been watching it with me and he just has no idea what the fuck is going on. A caveman fought the US military and then ate a kung fu master. After that some dude imagined he had more joints and punched the caveman so hard it broke the sound barrier and flayed his own arm. And then Baki invents dinosaur kung fu.
OOGA BOOGA KICK
 

Webdiver is such a cool anime. Yes, it has clunky PS1-era CGI mecha and early digipaint, but it more than makes up for that with cool mecha designs (the main robot turns into a train, and have you ever wanted to see an old-fashioned bomber jet, a steampunk airship, and a pirate ship as transforming mecha? Now you can) and a good story that doesn't assume the kids watching it are stupid. It has no fanservice, which is nice, and the show's other designs are pretty cool -- there's a cute little companion droid character (aside from the mecha), a massive mecha control room, and a neat mecha launching tunnel with countdown screens along the pillars. Its songs slap, and given that you hear them pretty much every episode during the transformation sequence, that's not a bad thing. It has interesting storylines that get into things like Goethian philosophy, time travel, false realities, alternate selves, and physics concepts. It alters the monster of the week formula quite a bit, providing lots of cool twists throughout the overall arc of the show and different, varied storylines in each episode. It uses the "rosy vision of the future" trope found in anime like Astro Boy 2003 and Gear Fighter Dendoh, a trope I personally love, but it can get dark at times as well and incorporates some Lovecraftian elements similar to Digimon. This anime is also a close cousin to Transformers, much like the Brave series and Shinkalion, because it's based on a transforming robot toyline made by Takara as an alternative to Transformers.

Beware, the subs are messed up for part of this anime, so it can be difficult to watch at times, but it's still incredibly enjoyable. I had no idea an early-2000s, CGI-heavy, digitally-animated mecha anime made to advertise a short-lived toyline would become one of my favourite anime of all time, but here we are.
 
Finished a few things recently. Akame GA kill (anime) and the Chained Solider manga from the same author. First off, Akame is a edgy mess. A glorious edgy mess with a rocks fall everyone dies ending. I enjoyed it until the ending. Apparently the manga was better because it finished 2 years later. From the summary I glanced at, I tend to agree. That said, for a show that lived and dies on its fights, I had fun.

Chained Soldier, completely different beast. Still edgy and violent... but a ecchi as well. But one with a actual plot and reasons for the horny. It's also getting a anime in 2024. I thought it was solid for what it was.
 
Koi Kaze is the only incest anime I can ever recommend simply because it treats the subject matter seriously, and it was a pretty good drama. I wasn't expecting much, personally, but it somehow hooked me in with its sympathetic nature as the main character didn't mean to fall for his baby sister as they hadn't lived together in like thirteen years or so, and he barely knew her then (she was just turning three when their parents separated). There's a couple questionable moments, but the characters ultimately have to live with their consequences at the end, something that incest anime completely ignore for escapism reasons.
Dude yes. Koi Kaze is one of the hardest anime EVER to recommend because no matter how you phrase it, you're going to seem suspect for talking about it but it's so damn good.
I think that's the main thing I miss about old anime. I don't pretend it did everything better like a lot of people. But good anime was just so real. There was obvious otaku bait, but back then it really was a topping and not the dish itself. You couldn't make Koi Kaze or Welcome to the NHK today. If you did, they would find some way to market it to the NEET market old anime either criticized or tried to avoid pandering to at all costs.
I just liked the way they handled mental issues better back then. Now most anime would take the cheap route and make the MC a handsome dude who happens to have depression but is surrounded by a harem and ultimately saves the world with the help of his amazing family. I think older writers had it right that in order to have proper self-loathing characters you actually had to have them be loathable at some point. Koi, NHK, Tatami Galaxy and a couple other shows back then managed to make characters you could sympathize while still making them actual people. There's a couple that have tried in recent memory but anime really didn't hold back before 2012.
 
I've never been a fan of One Piece, but I fucking dread whatever atrocities Netflix is about to inflict or has already inflicted on that unfortunate IP
 
I'm gonna do it. I found the first four volumes at Half Price, so God help me, I'm gonna read Love Hina.

My curiosity will be the death of me.

I bought the thinpack ADV set of the Love Hina TV series around 2010 or so and completely lost interest around halfway through. I think there's one or two DVDs in the set that I still haven't played. I'd hate to admit I outgrew anything in anime but harems might be the exception, or maybe Love Hina is just a lame harem compared to Tenchi Muyo, not that I've seen beyond the 3rd OVA series of that one either.
 
I've never been a fan of One Piece, but I fucking dread whatever atrocities Netflix is about to inflict or has already inflicted on that unfortunate IP
I watched the first three episodes and it really wasn't that bad. Not amazing or anything, but better than I expected. Of course, since it's Netflix, that bar was so low it was embedded in the dirt, so that's not saying much.
 
Do we have any Texholynze fans here? I don’t know about it’s mainstream popularity but it’s legitimately one f the most depressing and unique anime’s I’ve ever watched. It’s a futuristic cyberpunk style anime in yet another apocalyptic world setting, but what makes it unique is that it’s not particularly flashy or action focused at all, it’s actually incredibly slow paced and atmospheric, focused on its world to tell its story rather than characters.
Texhnolyze must be the most depressing anime ever and its soundtrack supports that notion.
 
The girl being into ROTTK in Princess Jellyfish hahaha its brilliant
It's really reminding me of Ai Yazawa
Too bad the series features fashion and tries to go for the 'you can't be respected unless you dress like a LAY-DEEE~🎵' consoomerist message. It doesn't mix well with SoL about nerdy girls.
 
Too bad the series features fashion and tries to go for the 'you can't be respected unless you dress like a LAY-DEEE~🎵' consoomerist message. It doesn't mix well with SoL about nerdy girls.
Check out the live action drama. It adapts the entire manga in an abridged manner that isn't bad. Ultimately, it's a message of you can still be a geek and like weird shit but you can also dress yourself up and not be a socially awkward recluse.
 
Check out the live action drama. It adapts the entire manga in an abridged manner that isn't bad. Ultimately, it's a message of you can still be a geek and like weird shit but you can also dress yourself up and not be a socially awkward recluse.
Thanks, but I tend to stay away from Japanese dramas, because the acting annoys me.
 
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