Sep 30, 2024
Thunder 3 is every bit as strange as the synopsis on MAL makes it out to be, it seems to tell the story of our titular trio (Pyotaro, Tsubame, and Hiroshi) as they try to rescue Pyotaro's sister, Futaba, from aliens who govern the world they've traveled to all the while they discover just how strong they've become in comparison to normal humans living in this version of the universe. But, from the chapters I've read, three volumes in total, the story shifts perspective to a university student named Segumi who joins the rebellion against aliens occupying our planet.
It suffices as an action series with
...
a great sense of pacing courtesy of its use of double-page spreads and the composition of elements taking space in said pages. One of its biggest pros is the scale of things as it lets you assimilate the danger befalling humanity just by showing you the sheer magnitude of alien ships or the stature of aliens themselves and while the incorporation of CG elements is a bit jarring at first it couples well with the contrast the series does between the cartoonish world and the realistically detailed world under alien control.
Now for the cons. It's a bit conflicting how people, in what we'd expect to be a world akin to our own (except for aliens of course), react quite indifferently to the cartoony trio (though it could be a commentary on current technology and social media, or just how accustomed they are to aliens at this point). Speaking of which, the trio, except for Pyotaro, don't have much character or motivation of their own. The series is juggling between being a Gantz-like set-up about people in battle suits fighting aliens with special weapons and powers, and a multiverse story about these odd cartoon characters entering a realistic world which felt more slapped in rather than something the story required, which feels incongruent with the hook the initial chapters had.
Overall there's much that could be ameliorated in future chapters I'm looking forward to reading, at the moment the series contains quality action, a unique style (uncannily similar to Hiroya Oku's works), and many mysteries surrounding the origin of the gateway opened between these two worlds and the intentions behind the aliens, that make it worth continuing to read for the time being.
Reviewer’s Rating: 6
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