BiggestKai
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Okay, so what you need to understand is that an animé adaptation often comes along while the source material [usually a mangá, but light novels also count] is still running, as a form of advertisement more than as an independent product. And most series that are adapted have released more than a year's worth of content and are expected to last longer [there's a reason Kimetsu no Yaiba ending when it did was unexpected, the animé had only just become a success, it wasn't at risk of cancellation and they expected more to come]. However, there just is no guarantee that the show will become a success when it comes out, even if that's what they want or expect. [If your show isn't hitting One Piece or Naruto numbers before halfway during season 1, you aren't going to get a new season.] So in that case, since they'll only have the 26 episodes they paid for, they might as well keep the plot for 20 and write something new for the last 6.I swear to God, the 2000s was full of anime adaptations that didn't follow the manga half the time, if that. I don't know why that was, if it was some strange 'aughts experiment or there were a lot of people thinking they could write the story "better" than the original creator. Although I think in most cases, that has everything to do with the manga being unfinished and there was no guarantee they'd get renewed so might as well make anime-original plots/endings to not overtake the manga. I'm not against this practice in all honesty, it's just that holy shit there's waaaay too many misses than hits.
This should be mandatory watch for anime viewers. I swear to God, the 2000s was full of anime adaptations that didn't follow the manga half the time, if that. I don't know why that was, if it was some strange 'aughts experiment or there were a lot of people thinking they could write the story "better" than the original creator. Although I think in most cases, that has everything to do with the manga being unfinished and there was no guarantee they'd get renewed so might as well make anime-original plots/endings to not overtake the manga. I'm not against this practice in all honesty, it's just that holy shit there's waaaay too many misses than hits.
For the most part yeah, though monthly series where far more likely to get an anime original ending back in the 2000s-2010s, stuff like the original Hellsing, soul eater, FMA, etc. because monthly manga can be around 2-3 times slower than there weekly counter parts in terms of how many volumes of manga they can make, so even if they waited a few years to greenlight an anime, there's a good chance that there'd be less than half a dozen volumes and cover it in 1 cour.Okay, so what you need to understand is that an animé adaptation often comes along while the source material [usually a mangá, but light novels also count] is still running, as a form of advertisement more than as an independent product. And most series that are adapted have released more than a year's worth of content and are expected to last longer [there's a reason Kimetsu no Yaiba ending when it did was unexpected, the animé had only just become a success, it wasn't at risk of cancellation and they expected more to come]. However, there just is no guarantee that the show will become a success when it comes out, even if that's what they want or expect. [If your show isn't hitting One Piece or Naruto numbers before halfway during season 1, you aren't going to get a new season.] So in that case, since they'll only have the 26 episodes they paid for, they might as well keep the plot for 20 and write something new for the last 6.
...and out of my list Your Forma goes. I guess I'll just keep watching old things instead of trying anything from this season.there was the case of Your Forma where they had the big brained idea to skip the entire first volume of the books.
2019 remake is closer to the manga plot, but the 2001 anime is comedy gold in a way the remake isn't, and has a superb soundtrack (RIP Okazaki Ritsuko) that the remake can't measure up to. If anything, I'd say to watch the original anime and read the manga.As a man with cock and balls (massive btw), is Fruits Basket worth watching?
Yes.As a man with cock and balls (massive btw), is Fruits Basket worth watching?
The anime was not THAT bad. It just ended before the manga did so alot of stuff never made it in.Needless
I would actually argue the anime was fantastic, looked and sounded amazing. Needless is kindve a goofy manga anyway its not like the anime only ending was particularly bad for what it was going for. The manga is of course way more fun.The anime was not THAT bad. It just ended before the manga did so alot of stuff never made it in.
One PieceIf you guys had to make a short list of bad anime adaptions based on manga you liked, could you think of any?
Aside from some low hanging fruit (Berserk 2016, every Junji ito anime, etc.) I think it'd list
Black Cat: iirc it was the first shonenshit series I read outside of 4kids/toonami and first one after sorta finding out what Shonen jump was way back when so I do have a small soft spot, and from what I remember, the anime barley followed the manga (and it wasn't a case of them running out of material the anime came out after the manga finished)
Blue Giant: I'll admit this is a good movie, but it pissed me off. They tried to fit 10 volumes worth of manga into one movie and had to cut a lot of good moments from the manga and further character development which just made me wish it was a full series instead, especially with how well the music is and some of the performances when they transition to janky CG to completely experimental animation (I'd might even been satisfied with 2 movies)
lucifer and the biscuit hammer: I swear to god this was a money laundering front for something, if it just had bad animation it could of been somewhat funny like that series the rotoscoped a guy on a tractor, but it was just fucking boring and sapped all the fun out of the original manga.
I don't hear people talk about it anymore, but it was a big part of anime discussion back in the day. I don't know if it's not talked about anymore because of change of Internet demographics or that people realized that neither the anime or manga is anything super special.Just wanted to quickly vent my frustrations about Elfen Lied. Everyone on the internet and even irl swear up and down that it's one of the greatest pieces of art ever conceived, but I found it to be utter dog shit. There isn't a single character that is remotely likable and their motivations are really dumb. The only good thing about it is the music. Crazy to me how highly people speak of it
Elfen Lied is all edge. You've been listening to people's opinions formed when they were edgy teenagers.Just wanted to quickly vent my frustrations about Elfen Lied. Everyone on the internet and even irl swear up and down that it's one of the greatest pieces of art ever conceived, but I found it to be utter dog shit. There isn't a single character that is remotely likable and their motivations are really dumb. The only good thing about it is the music. Crazy to me how highly people speak of it
The manga also sucks ass. The main character, if I can even call him that without wanting to punch myself in the face, is a massive faggot.Elfen Lied is all edge. You've been listening to people's opinions formed then they were edgy teenagers.
It was all the rage back in the day simply because it was 'baby's first edge/gore anime'. I remember watching it and skipping parts of the episodes. Teenagers will always think violent tantrums are deep.Just wanted to quickly vent my frustrations about Elfen Lied.
I don't remember any manga right now, but if anime counts: I love the ending of Speed Grapher. It's a weird show with pacing problems, but the ending is something few authors have the balls to pull off.What are some of the best manga endings?