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Mar 17, 2023
Preliminary (11/12 eps)
On a very long train ride a while back, I read the webnovel of this series. Amid a sea of generic "villainess" manga and manhwa tropes, this series stood out for its commitment to humor, character development, and moving the plot along without getting bogged down in the tropey-ness too much. The whole WN was under 50 chapters, and this anime adapts the entirety of it, start to finish.

The anime, while great in parts, does not quite manage to capture that same magic. As much as I enjoyed the series, I can't bring myself to give it above a 7/10. Let's break it down.

Art (6/10): ...
Feb 20, 2023
Isekai Ojisan (Anime) add
Preliminary (6/13 eps)
I thought the source material was a 4koma based on how formulaic this entire series is. Every single scene is: set-up; development; climax; tsukkomi, with essentially no variation across a half-dozen episodes. You may attack your typical isekai for not having the courage to have a regular fantasy setting without the relatability of a modern-day self-insert Japanese teen getting reincarnated, but this goes a step further by having the Japanese teen have all his adventures entirely as flashbacks in front of his tsukkomi audience of nephew and not-quite-girlfriend, while being a classic sexual assault NEET ugly bastard himself from the age of 17 to 35.

Story/characters ...
Jul 29, 2022
Healer Girl (Anime) add
Healer girl is halfway between a music/idol anime and a magical girl medical serial. Bottom line: it's quite good! The singers harmonize well and the instrumentation is meant to be emotive and at times tearjerky, but you're not going to find a whole lot of straight bangers on the level of Zombieland Saga Revenge (S2). It is nonetheless a pleasant entry in the genre of music anime.

Story (6/10): The premise is fairly simple. There is a semi-magical branch of medicine that can be done with singing, and each of the episodes revolves around the main characters (healers in training) helping people, including each other, with ...
Jul 18, 2022
An analogy: imagine you're listening to a singer perform a brand-new song that has four verses. Their voice is nothing special, but the first two verses and the chorus tell a deeply relatable, at times heartwarming and at times heartwrenching story... then on the third verse the singer stumbles for a bit and ends up having to repeat the second verse, and on the final verse the entire tune changes and is distorted until it's unrecognizable. How do you rate such a song? Was it good overall? Do its exceptional parts outweigh its stumbles and ultimate failure? Does it matter if the sheet music had ...
Jun 28, 2022
All right folks, let's talk Kaguya.

First, Kaguya-sama is a seinen series. That means that the target audience is young adult men. "But Alq! It takes place in a high school!" Right. It is written with hindsight in mind from the very beginning. The premise from Season 1 is about how over-dramatic and high stakes having a crush on someone feels when you're young and still in school and still trying to figure out your own identity among everyone else.

There's a lot more social pressure that teens experience in asking their crush out than 20-somethings experience swiping right on Tinder or Bumble. That's the point. ...
Aug 20, 2020
Chihayafuru (Anime) add
Chihayafuru is an incredible and oddly compelling series. At its heart, it's a classic sports anime (with occasional romance) but with the extra nerdy element of having the sport center on centuries-old classical poetry. Somehow, inexplicably, it works.

Story/Characters: 8.5/10. Chihayafuru leans into the sports anime tropes pretty heavily (childhood friends, training, strategies, tournaments galore, etc.) but it covers the topics from multiple angles with a solid amount of development. While each minor character in the club starts out effectively as an archetype for an aspect of karuta (e.g. hearing, memorization, strategy, fundamentals, poetry, athleticism), they eventually are fleshed out into more cohesive wholes. The presentation ...
Aug 17, 2020
Mo Dao Zu Shi (Anime) add
Mixed Feelings
Long ago, the cultivation clans lived together in harmony. Then, everything changed when the Wen clan attacked. Only the Yiling Patriarch, master of harnessing negative energy, could stop them. But when the world needed him most, he went kinda batshit crazy, killed a bunch of his friends and exploded. Now, my brother and I have found the new Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, a lunatic named Mo Xuanyu. And while his fluting skills are great, he's got a long way to go before he's ready to save anyone.

Ok, I promise I'll try to keep the ATLA comparisons to a minimum from here on out, but you ...
Aug 12, 2020
Usagi Drop (Anime) add
There are a lot of good things to say about Usagi Drop as an anime, and many of the reviewers have already pointed out many, ranging from the realistic depiction and struggles of being a single parent to the slice-of-life wholesomeness that everybody needs sometimes to the strangely fascinating watercolor style, so I will only add one thing:

If you liked this anime, DO NOT READ THE MANGA. Those who don't mind can look up why (heck, it's on Wikipedia), but suffice it to say that doing so will likely destroy any rewatch value for this series.

MAL demands a longer review, so I guess here's more.

Story: ...
Aug 8, 2020
Top-line summary: Selector spread WIXOSS is a weird chimera of a card game and magical girl series that serves as a deconstruction and commentary on the implications of both. If you're familiar with shows like Yu-Gi-Oh and Madoka Magika, Selector spread WIXOSS is a fascinating and thought-provoking watch. Don't bother watching the first season (Infected) though.

Story/Characters/Enjoyment: 9.5

Now, you're probably looking at this review and thinking: a 9.5? This guy must be crazy. That 9.5 rating comes with one major caveat: I am rating Selector spread WIXOSS as a *stand-alone* series. Why? Well, due to my own foolishness, I mixed up which season to watch first, ...
Aug 8, 2020
Kaguya-sama's second season has an obvious tone shift from the first season which could throw off some viewers, especially in the first few episodes. Right from the get-go, if you pay attention to the OP theme, it's even more obvious: "Once I make a move there's no turning back/It's time to take this mask off/To fire a shot/And As I do/I know it's not a game anymore." It certainly has a lot of the mind-game aspects of season 1, but it does something relatively rare for romcom anime in that it spends time fleshing out its characters (including minor characters!) as well as their interests ...


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