Tasuketsu: Fate of the Majority - A high-stakes, psychological death game so bad that you'll want to reach out for the "Exit Game" button on your end that has an escape latch.
In the entirety of the AniManga industry, the one genre that it seems to have a tough nut to crack, is the Death Game premise, and seemingly for good reason. You got to have a lot of ingenuity to write a premise that's believable to have a high-risk, high-reward return, alongside characters that would constantly lie and betray, for and against their own kin, just to make ends meet for a victory so sweet
...
that lands the remaining one standing: the Survivor, to Outwit, Outplay, and Outlast the competition.
One fine example of this is Spring 2022's Tomodachi Game, which, despite critics from all sides, is still a quality work in and of itself. But for mangaka Taiga Miyakawa's long-running series of Tasuketsu: Fate of the Majority? With just 6 volumes since September 2013, and the series' 4th part just getting started just in December last year, this is a work that, despite being ranked heavily justifiable on AnimeJapan's "Most Wanted Anime Adaptation" back in 2019 (to then fall 5 positions below the following year) based on the popularity of the WN (Web novel), all of these accolades are NOTHING compared to the abstract horribleness that is the anime adaptation being a slob and a slog to sit through all 24 episodes of BS nonsense...that made sense, be it that if you can get what's going on.
The anime itself works like your typical death game scenario, only except that this is more of a strategy puzzle game of wits and brains of a thriller mystery, where its question is the straightforwardness of its game: See the question, answer Yes or No, and the majority dies. But thankfully, just like with any RPG of the sort, it's a collectathon of skills called Rights that just about anyone could weave when integrated together with its user and be used when danger's in the way. But above all, each person has a unique Prime Right that is wholly the individual's alone, and can't be stolen from anyone, unless you're the Emperor that controls this game just before midnight strikes to emit questions daily and cut down the dead weight. Pretty simple, right?
Unfortunately, this is where the anime falters from the manga's writing, which you can think of as laid out in its sequential parts/arcs, that it takes the concept and runs along with it, while leaving the audience with barely any knowledge of what's going on, and forced to follow where the non-stop plot goes until it has time to breathe and explain what just happened back then. To add to the insanity, remember what I said about each person having a Prime Right? It has to be under the correct Attribute in order for the power to be used at its best, which, for the life of me, this is just way too much information just to remember which character has the specific power, that due to the progression of the plot, things could change here and there, that it becomes a whole tangled mess of a webbing.
Simply put, this series has an infodump with lots of characters that, despite inching out who are the real ones in charge (like Saneatsu Narita and Saaya Fujishiro in Part 1, to Raion Ouno leading Tojuro Yagihashi in Part 2), this Tasuketsu death game (if you could even call it that) just seems like an ordinary death game that's beatable under the right conditions, spawned from the cusps of those leading the charge for their own nefarious plans (that doesn't have logic either). The story at the start will put people off, and the high risk of that turning into high rewards at the end, I can confidently say that it's worth the run, though it's up to you to try treading through Part 1's rather mediocre run, to get to Part 2's exhilarating run.
Satelight certainly has seen better days, but over the last 5 years or so, it's beginning to look like the studio has been slowly downgrading into 3rd-rate status with bad animation and lifeless production values that just are like ravens already culling to fly away from whence they're from. For a studio whose Golden Era had been long past pre-Covid, this is the sad deterioration for a studio that is already looking at the finish line long before it started its hellhole down the production pipeline. Getting director Tatsuo Sato for the job, pretty much like its own production on Helck just last Summer, just hampers the success that both series could've had in its 2-cour, 6-month-long run.
The music is wholly forgettable, easily skippable even. Neither the OST nor the 2 sets of theme songs were that good to begin with, and I just find myself easily skipping over them like the plague they are.
In the end, what even is the purpose of this dreaded, lifeless adaptation that seems to drag on for weeks and months on end, for content that will easily disengage just about the equivalance of a TikTok person of small brainsize and have pursuers like myself hoping that the risk to stick with it will pay off with its rewards (which it did)?
Ultimately, the truth of the matter is this: Tasuketsu: Fate of the Majority, is a show that you'd be best to stay far away from if you're looking for a death game to satiate the investment of finite time. While I'd reckon that this is just not it, maybe a try would suffice...?
Alternative Titles
Japanese: 多数欠
More titlesInformation
Type:
TV
Episodes:
24
Status:
Finished Airing
Aired:
Jul 3, 2024 to Dec 25, 2024
Premiered:
Summer 2024
Broadcast:
Wednesdays at 01:59 (JST)
Producers:
VAP, Nippon Television Network, Nippon Television Music, BS NTV, Marui Group, COMICSMART, NetEase, Team Kawadon
Licensors:
None found, add some
Studios:
Satelight
Source:
Web manga
Duration:
22 min. per ep.
Rating:
PG-13 - Teens 13 or older
Statistics
Ranked:
#121592
2
based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity:
#4836
Members:
24,208
Favorites:
44
Available AtResourcesStreaming Platforms | Reviews
Filtered Results: 4 / 16
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Your Feelings Categories Dec 24, 2024
Tasuketsu: Fate of the Majority - A high-stakes, psychological death game so bad that you'll want to reach out for the "Exit Game" button on your end that has an escape latch.
In the entirety of the AniManga industry, the one genre that it seems to have a tough nut to crack, is the Death Game premise, and seemingly for good reason. You got to have a lot of ingenuity to write a premise that's believable to have a high-risk, high-reward return, alongside characters that would constantly lie and betray, for and against their own kin, just to make ends meet for a victory so sweet ... Dec 27, 2024
At first, Tasuketsu: Fate of the Majority was a total disappointment. The first cour was frustrating, with slow pacing, weak character development, and a story that didn’t seem to live up to its potential. It felt like the anime was going nowhere, and the hope of improvement seemed unlikely.
However, the second cour completely changed the experience. What began as a dull series suddenly became a rollercoaster of suspense, full of unexpected twists and smart strategies. The characters became more engaging, and the unpredictable plot pulled me in like never before. The second cour delivered what the first cour should have: excitement, depth, and intensity. While the ... Jan 4, 2025
I have no idea why but i decided to watch some anime that had quite bad ratings and was recent and this came up. Honestly with the recent disappointment in the anime i watched lately i thought how bad could this be right ? its still at least a 5+ could be worse.
And FOR ONCE finally i wasnt disappointed even worse, this wasnt some mega mind twister or heavy action packed anime, especially with how it started but it wasnt the worst. It really starts slow so you have to give it a chance before quitting it (basically gotta watch it all or dont even start ... Mar 18, 2025
So this is one of my first reviews and sorry if the writing is bad but I’m a person that loves high stakes games and I love this type of genre and I try to find all of the animes that relate to this genre as I can, but this was kind of disappointing to me not only didn’t have a great premise. It just wasn’t executed in the way that it could be. I am probably going to continue watching because at writing this review I’m only at episode three almost episode four and I am so confused. It’s a very good premise. It
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