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

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
The marks have nothing to with blood lines/being a descendant of such and such which got explained a little at the end of the swordsmith village as the mark indicating the complete mastery of a breathing style. Think it was also explained then that a key catalyst for getting a mark is the be in contact alongside someone who has the mark or or has been marked before. Which is one of the reasons behind the Hashira training arc because after both the Mist and Love Hashira got there's during the swordsmith village, it was a hoped that the other Hashira would get one if they trained together as well as maybe a tiny fraction of the normal demon slayer members.
Maybe I'm confusing with the weird color hair in the two hashiras from that arc. It's kinda bullshit thing to get during a fight where the Water guy was essentially a jobber for Tanjiro.
Could've sworn Azaka's backstory took up a couple of chapters, so I wasn't surprised that took as long as it did. If the fight length is gonna be an issue, then you're really gonna hate the final fight with Muzan.

Inosuke doesn't do anything in the Infinity Castle arc until the fight with Douma, so he'll be a bigger role in the next film.

You can blame the animators not giving different colors to those markings like they did in the colored chapters of the manga. His is pretty generic looking, so the deeper blue they used in the manga would've helped make his stand out more. I think every hashira gets one by the end of the fight with Muzan too.

It's less about him beheading the bear and more how the bear didn't try to stop him.
I could understand in a manga, but at a film they could have moved it without affecting anything or completely stalling the pacing. As for the bear, not that it had a lot of time, dude killed it ridiculously fast for a supposedly dying man.
Reading Yashahime. It is a very good sequel.

Now this makes me wonder, why so many women loved Sesshoumaru back in the early 00's? I had my hots for Kikyou but as a man, I never understood the attraction that women had to Sesshoumaru. The male character that I liked the most was Miroku than Naraku
The anime was meh, maybe the manga was better in not being too repetitive. Sesshoumaru himself was the typical aloof emo badass with a kind side. You could probably do a lot worse since he mellowed the fuck out after his first few episodes.
 
The anime was meh, maybe the manga was better in not being too repetitive. Sesshoumaru himself was the typical aloof emo badass with a kind side. You could probably do a lot worse since he mellowed the fuck out after his first few episodes.
I watched the first season when it came out and I barely remember a thing, but I renember that it was fairly episodical just like the first anime series. The manga is very plot focused. But since I never watched the season 2 I have no idea about the greater plot.

As for Sesshoumaru, your reading would be alright if we were talking about Yashahime manga, but not the main Inuyasha series, he clearly changed from that into being someone distant even from his daughters unlike Rin, Kagome and Inuyasha.

There was a sweet moment in the manga that Towa showed a video for Kagome about her family back in the future where they congratulate her birthday and she gets too emotional about seeing her family and hugs Towa. Not sure if this was in the anime but the manga is filled to the brim of this characterizations like Kohaku is still being guity as fuck. And Miroku feeling impotent over his lack of power and so on.

We even see more of Inuyasha and Sesshoumaru's father personality through flashbacks and how Inuyasha even compared Towa to her.

I still have 3 volumes to finish the series but I quite like it in comparison to the last sequel series to a long made series that I read recently being Saint Seiya Next Dimension.
 
Panty and Stocking has always been a novelty show where once you get over the esthetics it has next to nothing to offer since its humor is nonexistent unless you like seeing Japs mispronounce burger speak and various weird amalgamations of western pop culture, which is why I'll never take anyone who says the dub is better seriously because to me its just a bunch of unfunny adlibs, but back in 2010 seeing a show that was a pastiche of adult cartoons was something to behold but now 15 years later with the new season all I could think while watching was "adult cartoons aren't like this anymore" so the novelty wasn't really there anymore which made it harder the excuse the blatant flaws in execution it had this time around.

The approach of this sequel feels less like trying to improve or double down but just pretend there wasn't a 15 year gap in between so every segment feels like ideas Imiashi would have done if the series continued in 2011 which explains why outside the dated humor the structure and pacing is incredibly fucked because trying to cram so many ideas at once makes for an exhausting viewing experience so on top of being unfunny it's also not fun to watch from the most part.

The original while being a novelty for its time also had some effort put towards its look and feel of being a pastiche (thick black outlined, use of western animation techniques and homage to western cartoons) but the sequel just seem to throw it all away including its own lore (Garterbelt used to be a pedophile and Stocking and masochist) just for sake of a given segment to work with the only consistent thing between both seasons is that Panty is a slut and Brief is a simple (and now a cuck) speaking of Panty she pretty much took over the majority of the focus this season at the expense of everything else which begs the question what was even the point of the demon sisters joining them and the new twink angles when they were going to have Panty be the focus?

Overall those who still cared about PSG up till now will not give a shit about how sloppy the execution and slap dash every aspect about it was because they never expected to get a sequel to begin with but it says a lot how lukewarm the reaction has been even Trigger's usual slop eater fanbase are just wondering why they're wasting time on this and not the sequel to Dungeon Meshi instead.
 
Any thoughts on JoJo's ? I've read the first two parts and watched 5 parts years ago and was mostly angry and disappointed with the series. Especially since it got hyped and popular and people were pretending it's amazing and smart and whatnot.

It's certainly imaginative, has a distinctive art style and quite outlandish and maybe even flamboyant with the constant fashion posing. But the often paper thin characterization and especially the two battle systems have various issues, not to mention the constant ass pulls as protagonists and enemies either fall for the most obvious nonsense or suddenly know exactly how to solve a problem or defeat an enemy.

I intend to read through the manga "again" to see if anime adaptations are making everything worse through the pacing or if the source material is just not that good. Finished rereading Part 1 today and it was okay. The art is fine, sometimes looks great, but there are issues with proportions and there are scenes where it is hard to distinguish what exactly is going on. Hamon would be fine if there was more time devoted to it, since both Jonathan and Zeppeli tend to pull techniques just out of their ass when it is convenient. Characters are also whatever, Dio is obnoxiously arrogant, which makes him somewhat interesting. The ending was fine.

Part 1 is fine I guess, it at least didn't make me fucking livid like Stardust Crusaders or Golden Wind did when I watched the anime. Probably going to star with Part 2 tomorrow, which I remember liking the most out of all the parts that I've read and/or watched.
Yeah honestly Jojo's a wild fucking ride but the big advantage is no matter what you like you can find something you like in it.
Imo Part I is the odd one out, with its Dracula-esque setting and extremely short narrative. It's really a shame because you can feel how much the author just wanted to get over it to introduce more fun stuff to the series, and it could have been nice if he actually took his time to properly flesh out the characters. Johnathan is probably one of the weakest Jojos since his only real personality trait is being a goody two-shoes. But props to Araki for actually killing his first protagonist like this, it did suprise me quite a lot.
Most of what makes the series fun (the stands and other supernatural mechanics) are introduced later on, and i think are why a lot of people consider Jojo to be "smart" ; most combats rely on the characters exploiting the different possibilities offered by their abilities and often pushing it to their limits by playing around the different rules established for them, which actually limits a lot the kind of asspull the author is allowed to use. I'm rewatching Part II with a friend and at some point, there's a specific scene involving a cactus whose outcome we were able to predict because it fit within the rules established for the character's abilities. You don't see that much in most shonen where it's just "oh this guy hits him really hard but this time it defeats him", especially in the earlier parts which tend to have actually pretty underpowered protagonists.

If i had to give you a quick heads up on the next parts, it'll be this :
II/Battle Tendency is probably the most fun, definitely over the top but still "classic" Jojo with probably the best protagonist of the series. Pure kino
III/Stardust Crusaders introduces stands, for the better and for the worse, it does start straying away from the earlier parts by introducing the infamous 1 stand 1 chapter format that can make it a bit formulaic but it's still pretty fun. You start getting some interesting characters here and there but it's mostly very underexploited
IV/Diamond is Unbreakable is more of a slice of life kinda thing and where there is i think a noticeable drop in quality ; the overall plot is excessively meandering but there's some interesting tidbits here and there, and the antagonist is actually really solid even if it ends with a bit of an asspull (Bites the Dust, what the fuck was that and where did it fucking come from ????)
V/Golden Wind is where i think the series takes a turn and becomes extremely formulaic ; the characters aren't really interesting, there's a lot of gimmicks for the sake of gimmicks (King Crimson is bull-fucking-shit) and the protagonist is the worst the series has to offer. Giorno's existence also fundamentally doesn't make a lick of sense.
VI/Stone Ocean has a meh protagonist, a meh storyline and a meh setting ; overall very mediocre, and the animated adaptation is probably one of the shittest i've ever seen with 3d CGI and the abomination that is twink Jotaro and twink Dio. Plus it does hurt formerly established characters unnecessarily and also COMPLETELY IGNORES 3 OF THE FORMERLY ESTABLISHED MAIN CHARACTERS to have its payoff work. Like seriously wtf these guys are STILL OUT THERE.
After this, it's reboot time !
VII/Steel Ball Run starts a bit slow but is PURE UNADULTERATED KINO. Good characters, good storyline, good setting and some damn impressive writing that manages to make sense of goddamn parallel universes. Also it's a remake of Part I, so you get a new Johnathan that is actually interesting and a new Zeppeli that actually fucks
VIII/JojoLion is a remake of... Part IV, and honestly just kinda sucks. There's some good ideas here and there but like Part IV it meanders a lot although without having a strong villain to make up for it. The ending fight especially sucks since what little stakes are built up are immediately defused and the main conflict of the arc is left entirely unresolved
IX/JojoLands is STILL WIP but so far it doesn't seem really good ; it's a remake of Part V so that's to be expected.

Sadly a lot of people's point of reference for Jojo is the heavily memed Part V which is one of the worst, and i think that's also where the "Jojo is gay" thing comes from since that's when every character starts looking like a twink
 
Finished re-reading JoJo's Part 2. Still good, many good improvements over Phantom Blood, JoJo is an actual character for the most part, actually training for the hero, better side characters, great artwork, Pillar Man are kinda interesting villains. Still some typical issues, Lisa Lisa though being cool is a bit too useless, Araki killing off people to create tension and stakes, Kars's 180 behavior, the last fight in general.

Pretty enjoyable overall. Gonna starting with Stardust Crusaders tomorrow, will probably be a bit more tolerable since it won't have the anime's pacing issues, though I don't expect to like it in the end.
glad you enjoyed it. the pillar men are such funny fucking characters man they're the perfect blend of intimidating and completely ridiculous
 
The secondaries in Jojo do get a lot of screentime, to the point sometimes you could say they're coprotagonists (Bucciarati, Gyro in SBR).
based fucking Gyro actually getting to do shit
Halfway through reading Stardust Crusaders. And the pacing definitely is better than watching the anime. Seems to be the case with Shōnen in general, reading Dragon Ball is also much more enjoyable than watching it.

I am probably repeating myself, but the art is still great, which I would say is Araki's strongest quality. It is really imaginative overall. I understand why he switched to Stands, though I think that he could have continued to use Hamon as a battle system. I don't think Stardust Crusaders unitizes Stands all too well, though. "Hanged Man" is probably the highlight of Part 3 unless I forgot something equally good later on. It felt dangerous, there was good back and forth between JoJo's crew and the "Hanged Man". The resolution also felt more believable than is typical the case with JoJo fights, as far as I am concerned.

The monster of the week format, which I don't necessarily mind, and constant burning through Stand users probably come from its original weekly release schedule and can explain the repeating A-B-C of every fight, but I am surprised that neither Araki himself, nor any editor or friend realized that this is just lazy and shit writing which backs itself into a corner. Which becomes really apparent with Death 13. That entire fight or arc or whatever you want to call it made me so livid when I watched the anime years ago that I almost made me drop the franchise entirely. Even Part 1 with its paper thin everything was more enjoyable.

I think Part 3 would have immensely benefited from fewer enemies but longer and more evolved engagements. Because most of the Stands, apart maybe from "The Sun", felt like they had the potential for some great battles.
Imo Part I to III probably have the best art of the series. There's definitely some issues with Part I (that god damn panel where Jojo has a tiny ass head lmao) but i like the blend of Hokuto No Ken-esque character designs and literal Renaissance statues that were used as references to build the panels, it's really unique and lot less boring that the infinite twinks in increasingly grotesque outfits that plague the rest of the manga.
I do agree with the format sucking ass, it makes things drag on and you end up with a lot of wasted potential. It makes sense since it's an arc about travelling, but aside from Dio you don't really have any properly-built antagonists and they just kinda end up blending into each other as time goes on. Rip my nigga billy jean that barely makes a guest appearance when he gets taken down by the fucking dog.
 
I'm slowly making my way through the spice and wolf books and I have to ask, is the moon hunting bear relevant in the later books or does it stay a background element from the distance past?
If this was a normal action or adventure series, I would fully expect it to be the final boss the chacters would have to face with how many characters and events are at least partially connected to it, but with how the story has played out so far (just got done with the book about the angel), I didn't see it fitting with the overall tone of the series at all if that was the case
 
Kinda cute
1000044773.webp
 
I just want to know how old Ryu in The Water Magician is. Since he's immortal he doesn't age, and he spent a lot of time in an isolated area with no frame of reference like seasons, and it seems like it would've taken him a very long time to be proficient in his magic and swordsmanship to that level. I bet he's older then his elf girlfriend
 
I'm slowly making my way through the spice and wolf books and I have to ask, is the moon hunting bear relevant in the later books or does it stay a background element from the distance past?
If this was a normal action or adventure series, I would fully expect it to be the final boss the chacters would have to face with how many characters and events are at least partially connected to it, but with how the story has played out so far (just got done with the book about the angel), I didn't see it fitting with the overall tone of the series at all if that was the case
It remains a background element. There is no climactic anime battle against a final boss, it's not that kind of story. They fight with contracts and coins, not swords and magic. That's part of what makes it so great.
 
So just finished reading Stardust Crusaders. My opinion changed a bit more towards the positive comparatively to just the anime adaptation. Overall it was ok, Battle Tendency is the best part so far, but I would put Stardust Crusaders after that and then Phantom Blood. Not sure how I feel about Dio in this part, him being a psychopath in Part 1 was fun, but here he basically doesn't exist., almost as bland as the third and first JoJo. The World and Star Platinum being similar / the same to convey the connection between Dio and the Joestar's was also a bit unsatisfying. Avdol, Iggy and Kakyoin dying during the assault on the mansion and fight against Dio was fine, but Avdol's death felt just cheap due to the fake death earlier in the story. Speaking of characters, Araki really seems to have an issue writing characters and knowing what to do with them. Joseph was still himself, but he was also already established, Jotaro, Avdol, Kakyoin and Iggy just felt lacking. Polnareff felt like the actually main character with a lot of time devoted to him, and I think his main motivation was better conveyed than the ones for the JoJo's and the rest.

I remember Diamond is Duwang to be kind of a rollercoaster in terms of quality, at least the anime was, so I am excited to read it finally.

Most of what makes the series fun (the stands and other supernatural mechanics) are introduced later on, and i think are why a lot of people consider Jojo to be "smart" ; most combats rely on the characters exploiting the different possibilities offered by their abilities and often pushing it to their limits by playing around the different rules established for them, which actually limits a lot the kind of asspull the author is allowed to use. I'm rewatching Part II with a friend and at some point, there's a specific scene involving a cactus whose outcome we were able to predict because it fit within the rules established for the character's abilities. You don't see that much in most shonen where it's just "oh this guy hits him really hard but this time it defeats him", especially in the earlier parts which tend to have actually pretty underpowered protagonists.
I haven't mentioned it before, but you bring up a good point. Credit where credit is due, at least with JoJo Araki tends to keep the stakes low or at least low for the imminent future. The power scaling tends to be "normal" and not planetary/ galaxy destroying bullshit where every bit of tension is basically none existent.
II/Battle Tendency is probably the most fun, definitely over the top but still "classic" Jojo with probably the best protagonist of the series. Pure kino
III/Stardust Crusaders introduces stands, for the better and for the worse, it does start straying away from the earlier parts by introducing the infamous 1 stand 1 chapter format that can make it a bit formulaic but it's still pretty fun. You start getting some interesting characters here and there but it's mostly very underexploited
IV/Diamond is Unbreakable is more of a slice of life kinda thing and where there is i think a noticeable drop in quality ; the overall plot is excessively meandering but there's some interesting tidbits here and there, and the antagonist is actually really solid even if it ends with a bit of an asspull (Bites the Dust, what the fuck was that and where did it fucking come from ????)
V/Golden Wind is where i think the series takes a turn and becomes extremely formulaic ; the characters aren't really interesting, there's a lot of gimmicks for the sake of gimmicks (King Crimson is bull-fucking-shit) and the protagonist is the worst the series has to offer. Giorno's existence also fundamentally doesn't make a lick of sense.
Agree with Battle Tendency, good stuff overall. Stardust Crusader was better than I would initially have said, though a lot of wasted potential. I remember liking Diamond is Unbreakable mostly because I think the slice of life was a better fit than monster of the week. And the "lower" the stakes make for a better shōnen, I would say. As for Golden Wind, I strongly disliked it while watching, too much dumb bullshit. Already dreading reading it.
glad you enjoyed it. the pillar men are such funny fucking characters man they're the perfect blend of intimidating and completely ridiculous
Pillar Men were cool, I just think they lacked a better motivation, and Kars just behaving like a twat towards the end to justify the finale was bad.
Imo Part I to III probably have the best art of the series. There's definitely some issues with Part I (that god damn panel where Jojo has a tiny ass head lmao) but i like the blend of Hokuto No Ken-esque character designs and literal Renaissance statues that were used as references to build the panels, it's really unique and lot less boring that the infinite twinks in increasingly grotesque outfits that plague the rest of the manga.
I do agree with the format sucking ass, it makes things drag on and you end up with a lot of wasted potential. It makes sense since it's an arc about travelling, but aside from Dio you don't really have any properly-built antagonists and they just kinda end up blending into each other as time goes on. Rip my nigga billy jean that barely makes a guest appearance when he gets taken down by the fucking dog.
The art in Part II and III is pretty great, probably the only thing that remains consistent quality through the series. I think giving Dio more appearances and taking like half of the enemy Stand users and spreading out the fights would have improved Part 3 immensely.
 
Last edited:
Finished Panty and Stocking season 2. I still feel the same as i did in my old post about the season (the early episodes felt rushed and phoned in while later episodes felt better paced and structured). I still liked the final episode and season 2 overall but considering we waited 15 years for it to happen, it didint feel as unique or special as season 1 did. Cant say im hyped for season 3 (if it ever comes out) but i hope it wont take another 15 years this time lol.
 
Finished Panty and Stocking season 2. I still feel the same as i did in my old post about the season (the early episodes felt rushed and phoned in while later episodes felt better paced and structured). I still liked the final episode and season 2 overall but considering we waited 15 years for it to happen, it didint feel as unique or special as season 1 did. Cant say im hyped for season 3 (if it ever comes out) but i hope it wont take another 15 years this time lol.
Agreed. Really it was just a fun ride. Hope Season 3 happens but if not... I'm just happy knowing Brief and Panty got hitched lol.
 
why?
bitch is a hoe and geek boy is a confirmed cuck
Yeah the show literally made zero attempt to develop their relationship just like everything else. The fact that the the first season ended with Stocking being a demon and then go "sike" 15 years later makes me think we shouldn't take any of these seriously....but then again Brief is still a cuck even when he wins so....
 
Reading the synopsis of Trinity Blood only to realize it's literally just about England vs. the Vatican vs. Russia but with vampires - or transhumanistic genetically altered superhumans. The Rosencruetz order is obviously based on the Rosicrucians, and the Papal Special Operations group are obviously based on the Jesuits. Reads a lot like a mythologized/fantastical version of current events.

Is there any other similar manga out there?
 
Last edited:
why?
bitch is a hoe and geek boy is a confirmed cuck
Bitch has always been a hoe, and Geek Boy has always been aware of it. If he cared that much he should have tried to get with Gunsmith Bitch instead because she seems ride or die for a blonde cryptojew.

That said we don't know how the demonic kid came around, it's not as though they consensually went to hell. We just assume it was consensual because yeah, that's her character.
 
Bitch has always been a hoe, and Geek Boy has always been aware of it. If he cared that much he should have tried to get with Gunsmith Bitch instead because she seems ride or die for a blonde cryptojew.
Yeah. Panty was never going to stop whoring around, married or not. The best Brief was ever going to get was preference.
That said we don't know how the demonic kid came around, it's not as though they consensually went to hell. We just assume it was consensual because yeah, that's her character.
My theory is that its briefs lol
 
Back
Top Bottom