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Take some time to look back at the past few world cups, was Giroud the main reason France won the world cup in 2018? How about Spain’s 4-6-0 formation where they fielded 0 strikers and won the world cup in 2010? It’s just this cringey decadent idea that strikers are the most important part that I just know comes from a place to get impressionable children riled up for your show. Frankly, it’s dishonest and insulting.Another crucial problem with only having strikers is, you only have a limited amount of qualities and unique skills to give around where players can excel at: Pace, finishing, hold-up play, off the ball movement, spatial awareness to name the key ones. And evidently, they’re exhausted pretty quickly. What you’re then left with are pure power upgrades that I really dislike. Where it’s this childish one-upping of “I read his play”, “I read his reading of my play”, “I can jump higher than you”, “I can run faster than you”. It’s just not fun to watch from a tactical and footballing standpoint. And deep down, Blue Lock knows this, so what do they do? They decide to introduce imaginary monsters. Yes you heard me right.
Just like Bachira and the monster inside of him, there are 2 wolves inside of me, one hates this show, the other also hates this show. The individual monsters of this show don’t work and don’t get expanded on.
2Anime 4Reception 5Notes 6References 7External links Toggle the table of contents Akame ga Kill! 26 languages العربيةAzərbaycancaCatalàDanskDeutschEspañolفارسیFrançais한국어ՀայերենBahasa IndonesiaItalianoMagyar日本語PolskiPortuguêsRomânăРусскийShqipکوردیSuomiTürkçeУкраїнськаTiếng Việt文言中文 Edit links ArticleTalk English ReadEditView history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Japanese manga series by Takahiro and Tetsuya Tashiro Akame ga Kill!First tankōbon volume cover featuring Akameアカメが斬る!
(Akame ga Kiru!)GenreAction, dark fantasy[1] MangaWritten byTakahiroIllustrated byTetsuya TashiroPublished bySquare EnixEnglish publisherNA: Yen PressImprintGC JokerMagazineMonthly Gangan JokerDemographicShōnenOriginal runMarch 20, 2010 – December 22, 2016Volumes15 (List of volumes) MangaAkame ga Kill! ZeroWritten byTakahiroIllustrated byKei ToruPublished bySquare EnixEnglish publisherNA: Yen PressMagazineMonthly Big GanganDemographicSeinenOriginal runOctober 25, 2013 – January 25, 2019Volumes10 (List of volumes) Anime television seriesDirected byTomoki KobayashiProduced bySquare EnixWritten byMakoto UezuMusic byTaku IwasakiStudioWhite FoxC-Station (AkaKill! Theater)Licensed byAUS: HanabeeNA: Sentai FilmworksUK: Anime LimitedSA/SEA: Medialink Original networkTokyo MX, MBS, BS11, AT-XEnglish networkNA: Anime NetworkUS: Adult Swim (Toonami)Original run July 7, 2014 – December 15, 2014Episodes24 (List of episodes) MangaHinowa ga Crush!Written byTakahiroIllustrated byStrelkaPublished bySquare EnixEnglish publisherNA: Yen PressMagazineMonthly Big GanganDemographicSeinenOriginal runJune 24, 2017 – June 24, 2022Volumes8 (List of volumes) Anime and manga portal Akame ga Kill! (Japanese: アカメが斬る!, Hepburn: Akame ga Kiru!)[a] is a Japanese manga series written by Takahiro and illustrated by Tetsuya Tashiro. It was serialized in Square Enix's Monthly Gangan Joker from March 2010 to December 2016, with its chapters collected in 15 tankōbon volumes. The story focuses on Tatsumi, a young villager who travels to the Capital to raise money for his home only to discover strong corruption in the area. The assassin group known as Night Raid recruits the young man to help them in their fight against the corrupt Empire. A 24-episode anime television series adaptation, animated by White Fox, was broadcast from July to December 2014. A prequel manga series, titled Akame ga Kill! Zero, illustrated by Kei Toru, was serialized in Square Enix's Monthly Big Gangan from October 2013 to January 2019, with its chapters collected in ten tankōbon volumes. A spin-off manga series, titled Hinowa ga Crush!, illustrated by Strelka, was serialized in Monthly Big Gangan from June 2017 to June 2022, with its chapters collected in eight tankōbon volumes. In North America, the three manga series were licensed by Yen Press. The anime series was licensed by Sentai Filmworks. By September 2020, the overall manga series had over 4. 1 million copies in circulation.