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Jan 18, 2018 12:19 PM
#401
LoomyTheBrew said: Wasshio said: LoomyTheBrew said: Wasshio said: This is just off-topic but... what the fuck is this sort of SJW crap in this thread? Like seriously ._. I mean I don't really see it as anything wrong but apparently people are saying that the series is pushing an "heterosexual normative" uh, what the fuck is that? as for the fanservice thing... sexual assault? or misogynistic? Now we're going all out with this and it is ridiculous. I wouldn't let it bug you too much, they're just trying to incorporate more mainstream terms these days but those people who are anti-fanservice have always been there throughout the years. So far, the reception of the anime has been good. I wouldn't let it necessarily piss me off, but it's just weird as fuck throwing these terms for no actual reason other than some aspects the show has introduced (negative x positive aspect, the entire gender part, etc). And I just looked through this a bit and I just scratched my head and was confused. I know the reception for this show is good for the most part... but still what the fuck xD I actually read a little bit more after making my initial comment and it was definitely worse than when I first skimmed haha. And I agree, people that are throwing around those terms are completely overreacting, like... this is an anime for christ's sake, calm down! In terms of the ecchi and groping this was pretty par of the course for most animes, I don't get what's so out of line here all of a sudden lmao. I'd actually say it was pretty mild and didn't think it was jarring or anything, Trigger has done this type of fanservice before, it's not a problem at all. That's my point as well because sure, we had fanservice in this series but it didn't came off as necessarily terrible either, this was just getting used to these things and if anything its the same thing like the other shows that has done this. No surprise. It kinda brings me the question of it being double standards or not because when some studios do it, some people don't mind it but if other studios do it then its like "SEXUAL ASSAULT!". You get what I mean? As for the heterosexual normative I learned this a bit after a friend of mine had to explain to me what was up, and apparently this entire argument was applied to Ballroom e Youkoso as well. That along with misogynist and "ignoring that there's gays and lesbians". That's just throwing terms out like it was some sort of sock filled with rocks and hitting people out of their arseholes. I just don't see what's up with these xD But eh, it was something that I just saw recently yesterday on twitter initially on the Spanish anitwitter community, and then Facebook and such. I was scratching my head. It's just as dumb as this one. Ryuuou no Oshigoto is promoting pedophilia by having little girls playing shogi |
Jan 18, 2018 12:27 PM
#402
The first impact is to review many series seen in the past, the thing that attracts me most of this show is the context in which the story takes place. Very high quality graphics, a pleasure for the eyes, characters a bit too anonymous for now, no news regarding the narration. I await the next episodes to give a more truthful judgment. |
Jan 18, 2018 5:01 PM
#403
Jan 18, 2018 5:12 PM
#404
Marcuswongks said: I think the first episode successfully introduces the story in a way that made me liked it. Ditto. But what really sold it for me was the way it hearkened back to some of the best shows of my childhood and teenage years. |
Jan 18, 2018 5:20 PM
#405
zanquen said: another one generic shit with a beta-pathetic-shy-shithead-school-boy and forever™alone™demongirl™with-a-dark-past™ searching for a di**. Poor and simplistic graphics as always, ugly character and meha design, stupid and boring fanservice, plot... jeez i have no words. 2/10 so far. Ah, finally someone with a decent overview.. First episode is a disaster. |
Jan 18, 2018 6:07 PM
#406
Ehhh it was pretty good, classic trigger/ gainax feel too it. Not the biggest fan of the style but it was pretty enjoyable. |
Jan 18, 2018 6:27 PM
#407
Bawse said: zanquen said: another one generic shit with a beta-pathetic-shy-shithead-school-boy and forever™alone™demongirl™with-a-dark-past™ searching for a di**. Poor and simplistic graphics as always, ugly character and meha design, stupid and boring fanservice, plot... jeez i have no words. 2/10 so far. Ah, finally someone with a decent overview.. First episode is a disaster. The amount of hype and attention this show is getting is just baffling. What on earth do people see in this show? Is the anime community's hard-on for Trigger that massive? Is this show's similarities to their certain other beloved wish-fulfillment mecha anime making them view it with rose-tinted glasses? Or is the standard for the "teens piloting giant robots" genre so bad that this is suppose to be above the standard in comparison? While the 3rd point is probably not true, I'm guessing it is a mix of the former 2 reasons, along with some people that genuinely consider the eye-roll worthy characters, fanservice, and plot to be entertaining. |
Jan 18, 2018 7:28 PM
#408
I have some high;y subjective issues with this entry, but it is definitely one of the better offerings this season. |
Jan 18, 2018 10:15 PM
#409
Username23489023 said: shanimebib said: Butt grabbing or not, I found it kinda offending how blatantly sexist the anime is. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yin_and_yang You do realize it was meant as a joke, right? I was trying to change the subject of hetero vs. homo because I found the comments above mine pretty ridiculous when we have seen these things in anime for a long time now. The things that really, really bugged me are how they "killed off" that Naomi girl who is voiced by a veteran seiyuu. It will look more awful if she would make a return (*cough* valvrape a.k.a boku ja nai boku ja nai *cough*) and there is a huge chance that she could and the MC, who looks like poor man's Banagher Links. They already made him look like a stupid guy holding onto a girl's panty. I know it's not new in anime and it looks cool and all in those fanservicey romcoms or those trashy harems but not in a show that is otherwise dealing with life and death situations. Anyone care to explain what's the big deal of holding onto a panty when they don't even know what kissing is? It just goes neither with the show nor the characters given all the characters are serious types excluding the butt grabbing old fart. Take those things out of the first 2/3rd of the anime and it would be a relatively solid start for me as I was ready to ignore the EVA ripoff and accept it as is at the end. nb. The mecha design also looks terrible. Checked the designer and he did Star Driver's design which are awfully similar. But I guess that's me since I am too invested in Gundams. So, I am ready to overlook that. |
shanimebibJan 18, 2018 10:21 PM
Stay Home and Wash Your Hands. Protect Yourself. Protect Your Loved Ones. Protect Your Community and Help Defeat Coronavirus. |
Jan 18, 2018 10:52 PM
#410
Our friends at sakuga blog have write an in-depth article regarding Darling in the Franxx's production in most insightful and informative manner as possible. It's really interesting, I think everyone should check this out! https://blog.sakugabooru.com/2018/01/18/darling-in-the-franxx-introduction-and-episode-1/ |
Jan 18, 2018 11:40 PM
#411
UglyBarnacle said: Bawse said: zanquen said: another one generic shit with a beta-pathetic-shy-shithead-school-boy and forever™alone™demongirl™with-a-dark-past™ searching for a di**. Poor and simplistic graphics as always, ugly character and meha design, stupid and boring fanservice, plot... jeez i have no words. 2/10 so far. Ah, finally someone with a decent overview.. First episode is a disaster. The amount of hype and attention this show is getting is just baffling. And in turn I find the amount of hate that this show is getting to be baffling. It's certainly not as over-the-top as Re:Creators or BnHA in terms of a first episode, but I also don't see why this doesn't have the potential to get very good as well. What on earth do people see in this show? Is the anime community's hard-on for Trigger that massive? Speaking for myself, I can say no. As I stated in my own post, I'm enjoying all the references and inserts from other mecha anime produced by Gainax and Trigger. Is this show's similarities to their certain other beloved wish-fulfillment mecha anime making them view it with rose-tinted glasses? You answered your own question. Or is the standard for the "teens piloting giant robots" genre so bad that this is suppose to be above the standard in comparison? Well, let's take a look at what company this anime is in, shall we? 2018: Full Metal Panic IV (Spring) 2017: Re:Creators (sort of), Knights and Magic, Gundam Unicorn (TV) 2016: Gundam Thunderbolt, IBO, Kuromukuro, Muv-Luv: Schwarzemarken 2015: Knights of Sidonia, Cross-Ange, MSG: The Origin 2014: Aldnoah Zero, Gundam: Reconguista in G, Gundam Build-Fighters Notable series before 2014: Gundam, NGE, Daibuster/Gunbuster 2, Robotics;Notes, Muv Luv Alt: Total Eclipse, Valvrave the Liberator, Code Geass, Guren Lagan, Linebarrels of Iron, Zegapain, Eureka 7, Full Metal Panic/Full Metal Panic TSR, Gunparade March, Patlabor, Macross Frontier. Look at that saturation, and let me know how easy it is for someone to come up with a decent story and characters. Of everything that was listed, how much of it was truly "original?" Immediately, we can write off most of the gundams except for Thunderbolt, The Origin, and Unicorn; Knights and Magic is literal isekai trash, Cross-Ange was downright cringeworthy, Aldnoah Zero flopped, Valvrave fell flat on its face, Linebarrels of Iron was formulaic, and on and on. That leaves us with: Full Metal Panic, Kuromukuro, Muv-Luv, Knights of Sidonia, Guren Lagan, Code Geass, Eureka 7, Gunparade March, Daibuster, and Patlabor, Robotics; Notes. Even then, these series rely on common narrative themes and tropes. Moreover, almost all of them are adaptations of existing material (FMP, Muv-Luv, KoS, Robotics;Notes) or have huge brand power behind them (Gundam, Daibuster, Patlabor). Meaning that of As I said, there are only so many ways that you can tell a story. Out of over 20 entries within the last 15 years or so, just three series--Kuromukuro, Code Geass and Guren Lagan--succeeded in an anime-first scenario. I urge you to stop and think about that for a moment before you (and others here) yammer on about how a show is "but the latest trash." With respect to your other criticisms, I can only shake my head and laugh. Darling in the Franxx is hardly the worst offender, even if some moments were somewhat illogical (Hiro picking up 02's panties, for instance). Franxx shares company with every other harem or fighting anime of recent note out there, including this season's Killing Bites, which is worse in every way since the beta male there is quite literally a would-be rapist whose only other purpose is to get the female lead into trouble. At the other end of the scale, of course, we have the two other character tropes: the immaculate hero (see: Full Metal Panic, Aldnoah Zero, Kuromukuro) or the hero-lech whose sheer incompetence somehow wins the day (see, for example, Highschool DxD). By the metrics you yourself listed, Franxx falls squarely in the middle-ground in terms of character development and narrative setup. Just look at the first episode of NGE, with Ikari Shinji, arguably the ultimate beta male. How, in the narrative environs that surrounds anime today, would you receive something like NGE after its first episode, for instance? Further, we've only just been introduced to the characters. Hence, I suggest you hold off the rather unwarranted criticism until a few more episodes. I really shouldn't expect much, though: just like with the ravenous hordes with Re:Creators, i fully expect that an overly large section of the community will continue to mindlessly bitch and moan about the "plot" or the "lack of action" and how [insert overly specific nitpick here] "was done wrong" instead of sitting back and enjoying the show for what it is, and will do so for every episode, instead of simply not watching the goddamn show like every other sensible person would do. Hence, I expect that by the airing of the next episode tomorrow, I will have to wade through several more pages of shit opinions to find people who actually have valid criticisms of the show, instead of "muh art" or "muh beta males." JFC. |
Jan 19, 2018 12:09 AM
#412
I thought it over and decided to give it another chance. My opinion on this episode hasn't changed (it was a terrible first impression), but maybe things will get better later on. |
Sorry, due to licensing limitations, this signature is unavailable in your region. |
Jan 19, 2018 3:02 AM
#413
Jan 19, 2018 4:27 AM
#414
I like the anime so far but the starting was quite cliche to me as it quickly reminds me of Asterisk War and Rakudai Kishi No Eiyuutan. All the male protagonist met the female protagonist when they are naked or just almost naked. Also that Naomi girl was tragic and will probably be lost in time. Now time for the big question. Im pretty sure that this anime has some romance in it. So is the pink haired chick and the guy a confirm? We all know not all kisses mean anything else in anime. |
Jan 19, 2018 7:25 AM
#415
UglyBarnacle said: Bawse said: zanquen said: another one generic shit with a beta-pathetic-shy-shithead-school-boy and forever™alone™demongirl™with-a-dark-past™ searching for a di**. Poor and simplistic graphics as always, ugly character and meha design, stupid and boring fanservice, plot... jeez i have no words. 2/10 so far. Ah, finally someone with a decent overview.. First episode is a disaster. The amount of hype and attention this show is getting is just baffling. What on earth do people see in this show? Is the anime community's hard-on for Trigger that massive? Is this show's similarities to their certain other beloved wish-fulfillment mecha anime making them view it with rose-tinted glasses? Or is the standard for the "teens piloting giant robots" genre so bad that this is suppose to be above the standard in comparison? While the 3rd point is probably not true, I'm guessing it is a mix of the former 2 reasons, along with some people that genuinely consider the eye-roll worthy characters, fanservice, and plot to be entertaining. The “hype” coming from rookies that have barely seen 50 shows overall. A good story does not require fanservice, and more than anything... A character that basic being the mc is like the stereotype for truck drivers - fat, big tummy and stinks before he even enters the motel. Will see after 2 episode... |
Jan 19, 2018 7:44 AM
#416
unnecessary sexual things like this are one of the reasons people don't respect anime medium or take it seriously. Otherwise could have been something good. |
Happy watching |
Jan 19, 2018 12:21 PM
#417
TurboAutist said: This felt like a battle harem LN adaptation, and that's not a compliment. I hope episode 2 isn't as bad. Mind explaining this? We've yet to see the nagging tsundere childhood friend as in infinte stratos, and there are visible consequences to using the system in a male-female pair. Unlike Rakudai Kishi, Asterisk wars, and so on we've yet to see overt deus-sex-machina. IMHO, given the series its calling on for inspiration, it feels like this may well be a subversion of those particular mechanics. I came into this series with zero expectations regarding studio and crew, and can safely say that I've been at least entertained so far. Xion69 said: unnecessary sexual things like this are one of the reasons people don't respect anime medium or take it seriously. Otherwise could have been something good. *looks back at Evangelion*: *looks back at Daibuster's first episode where Nono screams "I'm topless!" as she rips off her own shirt to expose her (uncensored) breasts, after surviving both an unshielded two-stage-to-orbit launch and the vacuum of outer-space.*: NSFW *looks back at all of Kill la Kill* .......................................................you were saying something about unnecessary sexual things precluding anime being good or serious? |
Jan 19, 2018 12:41 PM
#418
Jan 19, 2018 1:26 PM
#419
firemagnet said: Mind explaining this? We've yet to see the nagging tsundere childhood friend as in infinte stratos, and there are visible consequences to using the system in a male-female pair. Unlike Rakudai Kishi, Asterisk wars, and so on we've yet to see overt deus-sex-machina. IMHO, given the series its calling on for inspiration, it feels like this may well be a subversion of those particular mechanics. I came into this series with zero expectations regarding studio and crew, and can safely say that I've been at least entertained so far. Sure, we haven't seen those tropes in the female members of the cast (maybe not yet), but I might as well expect something in that line since the set-up was just as predictable. The MC is a bland loner who monologues a lot, but he also has a kind heart, and then he has a fanservicey life-changing encounter with the female lead, later shit hits the fan and he ends up having to pair up with the girl to save the day, not to mention both of their previous partners conveniently, and unecessarily, died during all this ordeal. The show could very well prove me wrong later, but my expectations have lowered considerably after this introduction. |
Jan 19, 2018 4:45 PM
#420
firemagnet said: UglyBarnacle said: Bawse said: zanquen said: another one generic shit with a beta-pathetic-shy-shithead-school-boy and forever™alone™demongirl™with-a-dark-past™ searching for a di**. Poor and simplistic graphics as always, ugly character and meha design, stupid and boring fanservice, plot... jeez i have no words. 2/10 so far. Ah, finally someone with a decent overview.. First episode is a disaster. The amount of hype and attention this show is getting is just baffling. And in turn I find the amount of hate that this show is getting to be baffling. It's certainly not as over-the-top as Re:Creators or BnHA in terms of a first episode, but I also don't see why this doesn't have the potential to get very good as well. What on earth do people see in this show? Is the anime community's hard-on for Trigger that massive? Speaking for myself, I can say no. As I stated in my own post, I'm enjoying all the references and inserts from other mecha anime produced by Gainax and Trigger. Is this show's similarities to their certain other beloved wish-fulfillment mecha anime making them view it with rose-tinted glasses? You answered your own question. Or is the standard for the "teens piloting giant robots" genre so bad that this is suppose to be above the standard in comparison? Well, let's take a look at what company this anime is in, shall we? 2018: Full Metal Panic IV (Spring) 2017: Re:Creators (sort of), Knights and Magic, Gundam Unicorn (TV) 2016: Gundam Thunderbolt, IBO, Kuromukuro, Muv-Luv: Schwarzemarken 2015: Knights of Sidonia, Cross-Ange, MSG: The Origin 2014: Aldnoah Zero, Gundam: Reconguista in G, Gundam Build-Fighters Notable series before 2014: Gundam, NGE, Daibuster/Gunbuster 2, Robotics;Notes, Muv Luv Alt: Total Eclipse, Valvrave the Liberator, Code Geass, Guren Lagan, Linebarrels of Iron, Zegapain, Eureka 7, Full Metal Panic/Full Metal Panic TSR, Gunparade March, Patlabor, Macross Frontier. Look at that saturation, and let me know how easy it is for someone to come up with a decent story and characters. Of everything that was listed, how much of it was truly "original?" Immediately, we can write off most of the gundams except for Thunderbolt, The Origin, and Unicorn; Knights and Magic is literal isekai trash, Cross-Ange was downright cringeworthy, Aldnoah Zero flopped, Valvrave fell flat on its face, Linebarrels of Iron was formulaic, and on and on. That leaves us with: Full Metal Panic, Kuromukuro, Muv-Luv, Knights of Sidonia, Guren Lagan, Code Geass, Eureka 7, Gunparade March, Daibuster, and Patlabor, Robotics; Notes. Even then, these series rely on common narrative themes and tropes. Moreover, almost all of them are adaptations of existing material (FMP, Muv-Luv, KoS, Robotics;Notes) or have huge brand power behind them (Gundam, Daibuster, Patlabor). Meaning that of As I said, there are only so many ways that you can tell a story. Out of over 20 entries within the last 15 years or so, just three series--Kuromukuro, Code Geass and Guren Lagan--succeeded in an anime-first scenario. I urge you to stop and think about that for a moment before you (and others here) yammer on about how a show is "but the latest trash." With respect to your other criticisms, I can only shake my head and laugh. Darling in the Franxx is hardly the worst offender, even if some moments were somewhat illogical (Hiro picking up 02's panties, for instance). Franxx shares company with every other harem or fighting anime of recent note out there, including this season's Killing Bites, which is worse in every way since the beta male there is quite literally a would-be rapist whose only other purpose is to get the female lead into trouble. At the other end of the scale, of course, we have the two other character tropes: the immaculate hero (see: Full Metal Panic, Aldnoah Zero, Kuromukuro) or the hero-lech whose sheer incompetence somehow wins the day (see, for example, Highschool DxD). By the metrics you yourself listed, Franxx falls squarely in the middle-ground in terms of character development and narrative setup. Just look at the first episode of NGE, with Ikari Shinji, arguably the ultimate beta male. How, in the narrative environs that surrounds anime today, would you receive something like NGE after its first episode, for instance? Further, we've only just been introduced to the characters. Hence, I suggest you hold off the rather unwarranted criticism until a few more episodes. I really shouldn't expect much, though: just like with the ravenous hordes with Re:Creators, i fully expect that an overly large section of the community will continue to mindlessly bitch and moan about the "plot" or the "lack of action" and how [insert overly specific nitpick here] "was done wrong" instead of sitting back and enjoying the show for what it is, and will do so for every episode, instead of simply not watching the goddamn show like every other sensible person would do. Hence, I expect that by the airing of the next episode tomorrow, I will have to wade through several more pages of shit opinions to find people who actually have valid criticisms of the show, instead of "muh art" or "muh beta males." JFC. Sorry, was your intention to argue why this show is not trash and is actually good? Or are you simply saying its not that bad and that people should lighten up on the criticisms for now? I cant tell because you haven't actually said anything positive about the show that would suggest your favoritism, but you also deflect criticisms by using weak reasons like "there is only so many ways to tell a story" and "Franxx is hardly the worse offender" [of cringey anime tropes]. I mean, I appreciate all the insight into the mecha anime genre, but the only real point you have is that we should wait for more episodes before trashing it so much. Which admittedly, is something I normally do but couldnt hold off on for this show because of (in my view) the illogically overwhelmingly positive reception. |
Jan 19, 2018 5:28 PM
#421
UglyBarnacle said: Sorry, was your intention to argue why this show is not trash and is actually good? Or are you simply saying its not that bad and that people should lighten up on the criticisms for now? I cant tell because you haven't actually said anything positive about the show that would suggest your favoritism, but you also deflect criticisms by using weak reasons like "there is only so many ways to tell a story" and "Franxx is hardly the worse offender" [of cringey anime tropes]. I mean, I appreciate all the insight into the mecha anime genre, but the only real point you have is that we should wait for more episodes before trashing it so much. Which admittedly, is something I normally do but couldnt hold off on for this show because of (in my view) the illogically overwhelmingly positive reception. What I'm saying is: a) hold off on the criticism for now. It's only the first episode, and one shouldn't be surprised that narrative elements get recycled across a story. Again, there's enough saturation within the genre that nothing is truly "original" anymore. A lot of the shows these days seem to get support either for the quality of their artwork or for having a previous fanbase (see: Fate/Zero/SN). b) with respect to "eyerolling tropes" and such, I must ask, what were you expecting, really? c) I personally find it a bit disingenuous that most of the community, yourself included, seems to say "oh, this is gonna be [insert qualification here], because [insert director, cast, crew, studio here]. The community, upon debut, then spends the next however many episodes whingeing on about how "oh this trope is so bad" and [insert modern social comparison here] or [insert plot point here] because the anime doesn't meet [insert poster here]'s lofty expectations. Again, my response must be some choice expletives and "what were you expecting?" I have yet to see a criticism on here that doesn't ultimately boil down to "but the tropes," even when referring to the writing. Well okay then, but no-one on here has sufficiently explained why this is a bad thing or why it should be derided. Having watched anime since 2003, and with well over 100 series watched (so much so that I can't actually remember them all) I have seen enough to realize that the caliber criticism that you and others regularly post here is effectively useless, and beyond pointless. It won't change the direction of the story. It won't change how the director thinks. Clearly the studios have identified a target audience, and one that ultimately makes them money in the long run. While it certainly doesn't make a great story, the worst criticism that can rightly be said about how the introductions have come thus far is that how the primary characters have been introduced isn't very original and relies upon the most modern take of "meet cute" in a way that doesn't hook the viewer in very well. I see no reason why the male lead character's relatively brief monologue should be derided, because it establishes his view on his surroundings; it identifies his archetype, establishes how he meets the female lead, and indicates that it is the story, ultimately, of their growth. A classic heroic journey. Now, this doesn't make it excellent, but it doesn't make it bad or awful either. As for the tropes, I must ask for the third time: why does this matter? So the old professor grabs ass, and the problem-child runs off to facilitate the "meet cute" scenario and fulfill her needs, as per her character. And? No-one has yet explained how this detracts from the overall arc of the show in a meaningful way, and how it does not facilitate the necessary step of introducing the characters. No-one has yet explained why this makes the show remotely unwatchable or drop-worthy. It's also *gasp,shock, horror!* fiction. The show does not have to reflect your values or preferences, and you don't have to watch it if you find it that bad. Indeed, why bother posting about it if it's that bad? What use is there in doing so if you don't explain how you arrived at your opinion? Is it not a waste of time to do so? So, where I'm coming from, as someone who has seen enough to ignore the recycled arcs, plot points and small faults in writing to be able to ignore them so long as they don't completely derail the logic of the narrative, arguments like yours are a dime a dozen and do not sufficiently explain why or how you arrived at your conclusion and why your opinion should be considered even remotely valid. And arguments like yours flood the forum every single time a show like this one comes out. The arguments of the type you posted ultimately boil down to this, every time: "this show is unoriginal because it relies on these tropes, so I can see what is going to happen before it happens, and that's bad, so this show is awful trash, and should be dropped by the rest of the community." It happened with Re:Creators. While there were ultimately several flaws with that show, no-one gave sufficient argument as to why that show was bad, or indeed why "being able to see ahead" made it bad in the first place. Indeed, it seems that well over 80% of the audience actually missed the narrative themes and points that the show was trying to make. To be clear, I'm not saying "stop liking what I don't like." I'm saying "I have no bloody clue where you're coming from, and see no reason as to why the show is even remotely as bad as you've painted it to be, given what has come out over the years, and you've not given sufficient explanation as to why you see it that way in the first place; merely screeching about the 'tropes' and how a show follows a given narrative arc is fundamentally insufficient as a basis for your and the other intensely negative posts that I see all the time." If you don't like a show, and can't stand the type of story it tells because you've "seen it all before," and it doesn't immerse you enough, then the exit is as easy as clicking that bright red "x" in the upper right corner of the screen, or pushing the back button on your smartphone. Or, just maybe you can know where it's headed, and simply enjoy it for what it is if you must watch it. Shows bad enough to warrant the kind of criticism like the sort you posted are things like Killing Bites, Asterisk Wars, and Samurai Flamenco, where the characters are so one-dimensional that they have no redeeming qualities; they display a complete lack of ability to propel the story forward in a manner which excuses the blatant lack of originality,plot-holes, or lets the viewer have enough mystery that the path from point A to point B isn't entirely obvious. Darling in the Franxx is not one of those shows. |
firemagnetJan 19, 2018 5:57 PM
Jan 19, 2018 5:50 PM
#422
firemagnet said: TurboAutist said: This felt like a battle harem LN adaptation, and that's not a compliment. I hope episode 2 isn't as bad. Mind explaining this? We've yet to see the nagging tsundere childhood friend as in infinte stratos, and there are visible consequences to using the system in a male-female pair. Unlike Rakudai Kishi, Asterisk wars, and so on we've yet to see overt deus-sex-machina. IMHO, given the series its calling on for inspiration, it feels like this may well be a subversion of those particular mechanics. I came into this series with zero expectations regarding studio and crew, and can safely say that I've been at least entertained so far. I'd be surprised to see many subversions to be honest. I think tone deaf is a good way to describe the order of events when it comes to this episode. Hiro's dull monologues, side groups attitude and Naomi's death with the over the top magical mecha henshin sequence which was straight out of kill la kill, first among others, the random sexual harassment, and the unearned fanservice portion(what if the guy next to the lake was not Hiro?) with a really poor attempt at creating a dramatic impression really didn't mesh well to me. Next week alongside character drama we're also getting doggysyle cockpit set-ups with ass handles, if the PV is anything to believe. Now, I'm not going to write this one off since I'm still here to talk about it, but what they are telegraphing to me is that they are trying to create a romantic mystery plot between the characters while the male pilots are going to be pulling and pushing on their co-pilots butts. That's not a good first impression compared to Re:Creators, which set the tone and the premise for the rest of the show from the opening episode, and kept it thematically consistent. |
Cour_VictorJan 19, 2018 6:09 PM
Jan 19, 2018 6:32 PM
#423
@Cour_Victor, with all due respect, see my longform above. I'm going to respond to you as follows: Cour_Victor said: I'd be surprised to see many subversions to be honest. I think tone deaf is a good way to describe the order of events when it comes to this show. What precisely do you believe makes it tone-deaf? Other than functionality, what should we expect in episode 1? Hiro's dull monologues, side groups attitude and Naomi's death It wasn't the most effective or convincing, but it did establish three narrative points, as far as I can tell: 1. It establishes how Hiro and Zero-Two (O-ni for full goroawase pun broadside?) see the world around them and their current mental states. Each of them sees in the other something new and exciting as opposed to being resigned to their duties. Each of them places value (in a different way) on that story of the paired bird. For Hiro it demonstrated that without others, he placed no value in himself (a point which is reinforced throughout the first episode). For Zero-Two, approaching her death in the cold opening of that episode, it symbolized a treasured bond, however temporary. 2. It reinforces (but not in the most convincing way) the value of life in the universe (which is to say that it has no value, and that they are but tools). 3. It demonstrates and sets up the clashing attitudes of the various characters and the camps they fall into. One is fatalistic and sees it as "testing parts." The other sees it as a long awaited opportunity for glory or the fulfillment of destiny, if i'm reading the attitudes right. with the over the top magical mecha henshin sequence Okay. I'm going to point you over to Diebuster here, and ask you why this is a bad thing. the random sexual harassment And? This is fiction. They can do this. It doesn't mean that the show is promoting it. and the unearned fanservice portion(what if the guy next to the lake was not Hiro?) So? Why does it matter? It was meant to establish their meeting, and it did so. No, it's not perfect. Whether earned or not doesn't matter. It's meant to establish her character in some way. She's shown to be frivolous. She doesn't care unless someone interests her. What if that character wasn't Hiro isn't worth serious contemplation. with a really poor attempt at creating a dramatic impression really didn't mesh well to me. Excellent. You've explained why you didn't like it. It didn't make logical sense to you and it didn't immerse you in the universe. You've already done better than 80% of the people on here, and 100% of the angry shitposters who infest this forum. Next week alongside character drama we're also getting doggysyle cockpit set-ups with ass handles, if the PV is anything to believe. So? Personally, I find that amusing and interesting rather than something to complain about. Again, this is fiction; it doesn't have to conform to our values. Now, I'm not going to write this one off since I'm still here to talk about it, but what they are telegraphing to me is that they are trying to create a romantic mystery plot between the characters Yes they are. Or at least that's how the characters see it. Each sees a mystique in the other, and it will define their relationship. Above all, it's their story and how they react to what they find out. I see few if any problems with this. Yet. while the male pilots are going to be pulling and pushing on their co-pilots butts. Which is just as believable as bathing yourself in the oxygenated blood of a crucified ailen inside of a tube shaped like a tampon, which is inserted into the neck of a 100 meter tall cyborg. This somehow forms a mental link between the pilot and the soul of their dead mother living inside said cyborg, and that they must be [insert age here] or younger to do so. The only difference here is that the connection is rather more physical, as the mech basically becomes the avatar of the female copilot, who provides the physical link. No, I don't know why they're doing it that way either, but it clearly works. That's not a good first impression compared to Re:Creators, which set the tone and the premise for the rest of the show from the opening episode, and kept it thematically consistent throughout the first episode. Best impression? No, but this show hasn't given us any reason to believe that it's taking itself entirely seriously either. I'd say keep watching, see what happens. |
Jan 19, 2018 8:37 PM
#425
firemagnet said: And? This is fiction. They can do this. It doesn't mean that the show is promoting it. I don't think any of the stuff I listed is a bad thing in and of itself, you can make these things work individually. But it requires suspension of disbelief more than anything. I think the crux my point of view is that the creators have made some weird choices in establishing that, that there are values which are fundamentally different from ours and what these people live in is a different world. Changing up the order of events could certainly help, the two introspective monologues were dumped one after the other before we got enough information to be able to understand what they mean in the sense of the world they belong. The lobby scene unnecessarily tried to juggle between establishing side characters and providing context for the "fated meeting" and I don't know a better way to put it, but the writing felt subpar because they did it by the numbers with giving everyone a line of dialogue. The butt grab is an irritating factor, and I don't have the strong moral values that stand strictly against this. Oh how I wish I could grab butts. In the context of this episode though, it interferes with me getting a feel of this world between all of these monologues. I can't help it, that's a way too sudden mood change, and it keeps signaling me to look for a statement regarding this show that I can't say I can clearly see yet. That is clearly something for the viewer to see rather than the old doctors character. Basically at the point where 02 swims in the lake I feel like I am given the wrong set of information and sadly I failed to reach a state where I could say Hiro-kun is speaking for me, since I'm listening to his point of view, so the moment he went on about the "Alluring horns" I'm left wondering about the intent of this scene instead of being immersed in this work. This is exacerbated by another one of Hiro's monologues overpowering the ceremony scene. Where the show completely failed to me is that when Hiro "mans up" he references the monologues he delivered as if there was anything to empathize with, but how can I do that when the scene is frontloaded with all that technobabble thrown around and a bunch of cryptic flashbacks. What the hell is a gard.., klaxowhat, parasite? Who's a parasite? What's with this flower vocabulary? What, he was indecisive? Where did that come from. We close the episode with him monologuing about how his life changed because he took control. Okay I guess. If I was an expert I would say this is the wrong way to do world building, and that the creators completely botched Hiro's introduction with a loaded episode that I describe as tone deaf and disjointed even. Now, are there no positives? I give the OST a yes without a doubt, vocals are pretty neat. They certainly could fix the attitude problem that I'm having with this show later on by the pilots properly interacting with each other around the way their mecha functions. But I'm not going to lie, it's teetering on the brink. |
Cour_VictorJan 19, 2018 8:56 PM
Jan 19, 2018 11:11 PM
#426
Cour_Victor said: I don't think any of the stuff I listed is a bad thing in and of itself, you can make these things work individually. But it requires suspension of disbelief more than anything. I think the crux my point of view is that the creators have made some weird choices in establishing that, that there are values which are fundamentally different from ours and what these people live in is a different world. You have a much lower tolerance than me, then. Having said this, Toaru Majutsu no Index infuriated me to no end. Changing up the order of events could certainly help, the two introspective monologues were dumped one after the other before we got enough information to be able to understand what they mean in the sense of the world they belong. I think this was intended as an "media res." She's reflecting on what brought them together, but it's viewed from his perspective, which is odd. The lobby scene unnecessarily tried to juggle between establishing side characters and providing context for the "fated meeting" and I don't know a better way to put it, but the writing felt subpar because they did it by the numbers with giving everyone a line of dialogue. I disagree. In this case, after watching it again, I can safely say that all of this was done as a way of establishing Hiro and Zero-Two's characters by reflecting them through the lenses of the characters immediately with them. Hence, we get the following descriptions of the characters: 1. Hiro, in his monologue feels trapped by the system he lives in. He recognizes that he needs the help of others, thus the parable of the Jian. He feels that if he doesn't get out, he'll have to spend most of his time "hiding" or running away. He's been assigned to Zero-Two as her copilot, and his friends--who think he's a coward--think better of him for running away from Zero-Two due to her reputation. 2. Zero-Two is a distracted loner who escapes from her duties by indulging herself in whatever catches her fancy. She's Hiro's polar opposite, a girl who has known only freedom where he has known only the bonds of his duties and how they defined his self-worth. Because of her status, she's given free-reign, much to the irritation of those around her, but it's clear that she, too, sees her duties as a cage. 3. The lobby scene was meant to connect the two. It reinforces the point, made by Hiro's fellow pilots earlier, that Zero-Two and Hiro's meeting wasn't an accident. In some way, he was meant to be her copilot for the test of the latest machine, which was why he was offered a chance to stay at the plantation as the only male pilot without a female co-pilot while Naomi was sent away (and ultimately killed as a result). The Klaxosaur (this universe's version of the angels from NGE) are what forces them together out of sheer need. Him because he sees in her the freedom he craves. Her because she needs him to break the shackle that is her duty. The Yin-Yang relationship is in full play here. It's not done in the best way, but the more I watch it, the more I understand what was being intended. The butt grab is an irritating factor, and I don't have the strong moral values that stand strictly against this. Oh how I wish I could grab butts. In the context of this episode though, it interferes with me getting a feel of this world between all of these monologues. The way it takes place suggests to me that the professor likely intended it as distraction to let her get away. He has an academic and philosophical interest in everything that's going on that hasn't quite been revealed yet. I can't help it, that's a way too sudden mood change, and it keeps signaling me to look for a statement regarding this show that I can't say I can clearly see yet. That is clearly something for the viewer to see rather than the old doctors character. This show has something to do with notions of romance and fate, freedom versus duty. What I'm seeing is that the doctor let her get away, though the escalator scene doesn't entirely make that clear. It's impossible for her to have jumped that far though, so she likely got away around the time that the professor grabbed the officer's butt. The themes of this episode (the boy who longs for freedom, the girl who represents it, the duty and rite of passage that binds them together, and the coming of age that their meeting represents) are all quite clear, but its told in a way that doesn't make this come across as well as it should. The more I look at this the more I can say that this is in every way the spiritual successor to NGE, Diebuster, and Guren Lagan in way that balances out the three. It's certainly not as deep or dark as NGE yet. Basically at the point where 02 swims in the lake I feel like I am given the wrong set of information and sadly I failed to reach a state where I could say Hiro-kun is speaking for me, since I'm listening to his point of view, so the moment he went on about the "Alluring horns" I'm left wondering about the intent of this scene instead of being immersed in this work. The problem here is that unlike so many other shows, Hiro is not meant to be an audience avatar. He's not meant to speak for you. That scene is meant to emphasize how different yet similar they are. Each of them sees in the other something that they need, desire, or don't have. They're playing the parable of the Jian straight here. They both need each other in some way. They're both drawn to each other, and find an escape in each other. There are so many different ways that this is expressed in that scene alone that I don't really know where to begin. This is exacerbated by another one of Hiro's monologues overpowering the ceremony scene. This is a deliberate contrast. His friends see the ceremony as a right of passage. The "father" gives it a religious essence, naming them the defenders of the city. Hiro expands on this and what it means to him: identifying it as being their culmination, their very purpose in life, their rite of passage. He affirms this by effectively stating that without that purpose, he has no value. He's running away because he feels that he has nothing left. It was his very identity. Remember: this episode is ultimately all about Hiro and Zero-Two. It defines them and their motivations through how they see their environment. Where the show completely failed to me is that when Hiro "mans up" he references the monologues he delivered as if there was anything to empathize with, but how can I do that when the scene is frontloaded with all that technobabble thrown around and a bunch of cryptic flashbacks. What the hell is a gard.., klaxowhat, parasite? Who's a parasite? What's with this flower vocabulary? What, he was indecisive? Where did that come from. Just like the aliens invulnerable to everything else are "angels" and the pilots are designated "children" as a singular. The Japanese term for "klaxosaur" is Kyo-ryu (lit: Great dragon), but the english translation from greek-latin means "howling or alarming lizard." Technical terms aside, I found this somewhat confusing as well. He decides to "get in the fucking robot" because, as he effectively states, Zero-Two gives him "somewhere to belong" and a purpose. She gives him that, and demands that he stay by her side (in so many words) in return. They need each other for much the same reasons, so much so that they're really two sides of the same coin. They each need companionship and acceptance, and express that need in similar but ultimately different ways. There's a lot going on here psychologically, philosphically and emotionally, but the episode doesn't do enough to capitalize on those themes, even though the franxx mechs rely on that need and completion as the very source of their power (as the professor explicitly states). The greater the depth of that completion and need, the more "perfect" the form of the mech they pilot. Now, it's going to be interesting to see how this evolves, because relationships are naturally unstable, even more so than the links that made plug-connections possible in Evangelion. We close the episode with him monologuing about how his life changed because he took control. Okay I guess. If I was an expert I would say this is the wrong way to do world building, and that the creators completely botched Hiro's introduction with a loaded episode that I describe as tone deaf and disjointed even. It's not so much that he took control but that he found his purpose in her and accepted it of his own free will. Again: she gave him purpose, he gave her the partner and acceptance she needed. Did they do it in the right way? certainly not. Again, however, there's a lot of themes and subtext here that can be missed, but to which the episode stays true to throughout its length. Now, are there no positives? I give the OST a yes without a doubt, vocals are pretty neat. They certainly could fix the attitude problem that I'm having with this show later on by the pilots properly interacting with each other around the way their mecha functions. But I'm not going to lie, it's teetering on the brink. Yes, the OST is fantastic. Not Sawano-level, but still really good. I thoroughly recommend that you watch the episode a few times more to see what it's trying to do and what the underlying themes are. I may be reading too much into it, but I see a lot of promise here in a show where children are treated like the "parasites" that they're named after, piloting mechs fueled by their need and desire for what they see in each other. |
firemagnetJan 19, 2018 11:15 PM
Jan 19, 2018 11:36 PM
#427
I already like this now tbh. Helps that Mecha is one of my favorite genres. Damn that animation was not CG too unlike some other mecha animes |
Fire Emblem anime when |
Jan 19, 2018 11:47 PM
#428
Probably one of the best first episodes I've watched. It might not mean much--many series derail pretty far pretty fast--but it's good enough to set up the next 2-3 episodes and I'm looking pretty forward to how things unfold. |
Jan 20, 2018 3:21 AM
#429
On https://www.vimmbox.com/media/discussions/index.php?discussion=43 there is an amazing review about this gorgeous looking anime :D |
Jan 20, 2018 3:38 AM
#430
firemagnet said: The way it takes place suggests to me that the professor likely intended it as distraction to let her get away. He has an academic and philosophical interest in everything that's going on that hasn't quite been revealed yet.... ..... The problem here is that unlike so many other shows, Hiro is not meant to be an audience avatar. He's not meant to speak for you. That scene is meant to emphasize how different yet similar they are. Each of them sees in the other something that they need, desire, or don't have. They're playing the parable of the Jian straight here. They both need each other in some way. They're both drawn to each other, and find an escape in each other. There are so many different ways that this is expressed in that scene alone that I don't really know where to begin. I actually think you have a good grasp on the author's intent but you definitely missed my point: the butt grab happens at about the spot where I should start getting into the world of this story. Instead the author reveals so many of the cards from his deck to you from the get go. There are too many choices for a hook to suck me into this work, but the author is looking into my eyes at every "dramatic" moment as if the monologues warrant the payoff or the contrived timing. Naomi getting crushed is a major offender, it's almost completely thrown away right as it happens as if they couldn't find a better spot to do it. It just telegraphs the idea that the author didn't put much thought into her character and her impression with Hiro. It happened because the other case would be a major writer's block to get 02-Hiro romance going. They keep falling flat on their faces. Hiro is the one who's talking to me yet I don't feel like he is the one speaking. He doesn't say the human thing to say and reflect on something hortible that happened to his companion in his final monologue, but instead talks about what a wonderful life-changing day it was. I rewatched it several times but it doesn't get better. First impression trumps the most. It's as if the hook completely missed the mark. Anyway I ran out of things to say but it looks like the authors are not self aware enough to realize some elements are played out or don't mesh well with one another. I still stand by with the tone deaf and disjointed description. |
Cour_VictorJan 20, 2018 6:39 AM
Jan 20, 2018 4:52 AM
#431
@TComicMan: Nice review! Though I hope people would praise young animators that affiliated with A-1. It seems we wouldn't see "Trigger episode" (fully produced by them) for the first three episodes. Not necessarily a bad news tho! There are many skilled A-1's (and ex-Gainax) affiliated animators too. |
Jan 20, 2018 7:12 AM
#432
To all of the earlier people before me: don't be too hurt by your own expectations because of your urge to call it "not Evangelion''. Of course this isn't Evangelion. Didn't you read in the plot synopsis that there would be a girl with horns appearing? That should be a clear signal that this is more of a fanservice moe-show than a certain other series. Nothing compares with Evangelion: we know. That is why it takes forever to finish those movies... ;) Also, concering the gender/sex theme in this series: remember Star Driver? Cross Ange? And why are mecha pilots nearly always male? Seriously, name me a good mecha show without fanservice where the main person is a female (and isn't called Ange) and doesn't have an enhanced body or mind. Clearly the Frankxx world is just a where heterosexuality is the norm... which is also to ensure overseas sales where being homosexuality isn't even accepted. Blame it on anime as a worldwide anime export product. ;) I was quite impressed with this first episode: the visuals were amazing. Plotwise I like the dual mecha drivers. More generic is the useless boy meeting a tyrant girl after he messed up with his previous girl who is now sent away... plotwise I'll be awaiting the next few episodes to see where this is going. The homages where great, but no guarantee for the rest of the show. The huge miss of this first episode is that we have no idea what is going to happen. The ulterior motive to keep watching still needs to be ensured. |
Dutch anime blogger with a love for Ikuhara's antics and proper storytelling. |
Jan 20, 2018 4:38 PM
#433
Okay, so, I re-watched episode 1. My god does it feel rushed. Things are definitely more clear now, however, I'm still confused on a few points. 1. The terminology. Why are pilots called parasites? Why is 002 referred to as a pistil? What is this stamen that she devoured? Why do they keep using terms that are ambiguous? 2. What exactly happened betwen Hiro and Naomi? The best I can gather is that they failed their test together (the scene showing it being a flashback) and had to leave, but he got special permission to stay. But in the first scene showing the other pilots, it makes it seem like something much bigger happened. If it wasn't a flashback, then I'm even more confused 3. Why does he get special permission to stay? Anyways, I still see a lot of potential in this series, but it seems like it's trying too hard to be deep right now, to the point where it just makes it more confusing than it needs to be. Hopefully it doesn't continue down this path. I absolutely love the art, and 002 is a fun character (even if she's nothing we haven't seen before) edit: well, one of these are addressed in episode 2. |
ChangeLeopardonJan 20, 2018 5:19 PM
Jan 20, 2018 5:29 PM
#434
EpsilonX said: 1. The terminology. Why are pilots called parasites? Why is 002 referred to as a pistil? What is this stamen that she devoured? Why do they keep using terms that are ambiguous? 2. What exactly happened betwen Hiro and Naomi? The best I can gather is that they failed their test together (the scene showing it being a flashback) and had to leave, but he got special permission to stay. But in the first scene showing the other pilots, it makes it seem like something much bigger happened. If it wasn't a flashback, then I'm even more confused 3. Why does he get special permission to stay? To the best of my understanding from ep. 1: 1. There will probably a deeper meaning to "parasite" that will get revealed later, but this is by far not the weirdest label. So you need a male and a female to operate these mechas--the female is pistil (referring to the female part of a flower) and the male is a stamen (referring to the male part of a flower). They say 002 "devours" stamen probably because none of them have been a perfect match (until Hiro) so it creates strain on them, which is probably why her partner is all injured. 2. As you know, Hiro and Naomi were not able to perform together and thus failed a test. Hiro obviously blamed himself, so that's why he stayed away from the rest of the parasites. There might be more to it that we'll figure out later on, but that's really all ep. 1 tells us. 3. My impression is that Hiro is probably "too good" for Naomi which is why Naomi doesn't have a choice whereas Hiro does. Others believed he could graduate with them which suggests that they know he's not the problem in that failed test. Naomi herself also seemed to allude to this by saying he could find another partner. And the fact that he can team up with 002 and survive is proof of that. But it's unclear how they know Hiro is capable--perhaps he's teamed up with another person before since he said he lost the ability first time he talked to 002. |
Jan 21, 2018 6:19 AM
#435
GREW said: More Trigger and I had drop it from the first episode. But strange enough that the mecha has a mouth and even talks... Feels like old Transformers cartoons. And good thing that the main male character is spineless fool. Guess we will have many discussion who has less balls, Shinji or him. This. The mecha in overall looks cool except that face part. The robot could have a normal mecha face like those in Evangelion, Gundam, etc. But really, a face with anime style eye and mouth without any lines?! And the robot can even talk with pure human voice, no robot / machine / radio distortion to the voice? Even the MC robot in beast form looks better compared its awakened form. Some other animes who also have same thing at least use distorted / robotic voices and at least the lips not moving at all. --- The story and the character itself seems quite good tho (watched ep 2 already). Just not like that part above. |
Jan 21, 2018 6:57 AM
#436
That was an okay episode. Typical weak male character with a "badass" female character who kissed the male character. Pffft. Nothing new with the characters. Jesus. I love the animation, though, since it's Studio Trigger. I'm not into mecha anime, but I'm willing to give this a chance for the sole reason that it's Studio Trigger behind this. Haha. THIS IS PACIFIC RIM ANIME, but shit. Hahaha. Naaah, too early to judge the show. But I'm having an inkling that the two MCs will be the reason why I'm going to drop this show, and I hope it won't happen. 3/5. |
Jan 22, 2018 6:51 PM
#437
Woah, this is actually a pretty good start. I didn't want to watch this after reading the summary because couples...piloting robots...blah blah blah xD But since it got such a nice score i had to watch it, and after watching this episode i don't regret it. This anime reminds me of TTGL, NGE, and something else that i can't remember. 24 eps! Really hoping this will be a good run. |
Jan 23, 2018 8:52 AM
#438
Seems like a good show, and it's an original 24 episodes, the end was good, I like 02 she is the girl who won't fit with normies. |
Jan 23, 2018 10:19 AM
#439
zannett said: 1. There will probably a deeper meaning to "parasite" that will get revealed later, but this is by far not the weirdest label. So you need a male and a female to operate these mechas--the female is pistil (referring to the female part of a flower) and the male is a stamen (referring to the male part of a flower). They say 002 "devours" stamen probably because none of them have been a perfect match (until Hiro) so it creates strain on them, which is probably why her partner is all injured. It has me thinking though, but I believe the subtitles that I had said "her" stamen. I'm not going to climb this kind of mountain, but something is definitely up. |
Jan 23, 2018 11:09 AM
#440
I really like the character and mecha designs here. The Franxx at the end strongly reminded me of an even cooler Omega from Mega Man Zero, which is really good. 002 is really hot, too. That aside, nothing too exciting happened yet, but we'll see what happens next. zanquen said: another one generic shit with a beta-pathetic-shy-shithead-school-boy and forever™alone™demongirl™with-a-dark-past™ searching for a di**. Poor and simplistic graphics as always, ugly character and meha design, stupid and boring fanservice, plot... jeez i have no words. 2/10 so far. I kinda want to tell you to buzz off, but you gave JoJo and HxH a 10, eh. |
Jan 24, 2018 9:00 AM
#442
It's feels like mix between some Mecha anime. Star Driver x Eva x Gunbuster, some Majestic vibes too. Not saying it's bad. It's pretty okay for a first episode. I think's it's pretty obvious that the naked scene doesn't intended to be a fan service whatsoever. It's more like a set up to show 002 personality. |
suzuya_mitsukoJan 24, 2018 9:03 AM
"I'm tired, Boss. Mostly I'm tired of people being ugly at each other." - John Coffey, Green Miles |
Jan 26, 2018 5:16 AM
#443
Jan 26, 2018 8:08 AM
#444
The start is a little confused, but you don´t worry, in the next episodes, i suppose that all will be explained!!!! |
Jan 28, 2018 4:26 AM
#445
I just hope that the anime staffs didn't butcher this series and its later episodes up. Hopefully, the anime staffs will still keep and use their kind of "original ideas" for that "prologue". |
CylicoOct 8, 2019 7:50 PM
Jan 28, 2018 2:07 PM
#446
I don't usually like mecha, but the description pulled me in and I had to give it a try. Was not disappointed with this first episode. Actually enjoyed it quite a bit, although it's a bit confusing and jangled. I'm sure this is an anime that will probably get better once things are explained more. |
"Wonder is always difficult until you forgive whoever destroyed your love of surprises" — Edmond Manning |
Jan 30, 2018 10:43 PM
#447
Feb 2, 2018 4:22 AM
#449
I guess you could say that this was more or less what I expected, not bad. |
"At some point, I stopped hoping." |
Feb 4, 2018 5:50 PM
#450
Another bad first episode of the season. The fanservice is over the place. The male MC is generic and boring while the female MC is perverted. The meeting between both MC is bad. I still try to understand the plot. 2/5 |
NurguburuFeb 4, 2018 6:29 PM
All weebs creatures of the galaxy, hear this message. Those of you who listen will not be struck by western animation. You will no longer know hunger, nor pain. Your Anime have come to lead you now. Our strength shall serve as a luminous sun toward which all intelligence may blossom. And the impervious shelter beneath which you will prosper. However, for those who refuse our offer and cling to their western animation ways… For you, there will be great wrath. |
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