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14 20181002 Tensei shitara Slime Datta Ken TV, 2018Finished 24 eps, 23 min Action Adventure Comedy Fantasy Tensei shitara Slime Datta Ken Thirty-seven-year-old Satoru Mikami is a typical corporate worker, who is perfectly content with his monotonous lifestyle in Tokyo, other than failing to nail down a girlfriend even once throughout his life. In the midst of a casual encounter with his colleague, he falls victim to a random assailant on the streets and is stabbed. However, while succumbing to his injuries, a peculiar voice echoes in his mind, and recites a bunch of commands which the dying man cannot make sense of. When Satoru regains consciousness, he discovers that he has reincarnated as a goop of slime in an unfamiliar realm. In doing so, he acquires newfound skills—notably, the power to devour anything and mimic its appearance and abilities. He then stumbles upon the sealed Catastrophe-level monster "Storm Dragon" Veldora who had been sealed away for the past 300 years for devastating a town to ashes. Sympathetic to his predicament, Satoru befriends him, promising to assist in destroying the seal. In return, Veldora bestows upon him the name Rimuru Tempest to grant him divine protection. Now, liberated from the mundanities of his past life, Rimuru embarks on a fresh journey with a distinct goal in mind. As he grows accustomed to his new physique, his gooey antics ripple throughout the world, gradually altering his fate. [Written by MAL Rewrite] Studio8bit SourceManga ThemesIsekaiReincarnation DemographicShounen 8.That means it'll hit the streaming service four months after Part 1 of Season 2 debuted on November 3. Like the first half, Part 2 will release the last four episodes of the eight-episode second season weekly. Fittingly, Prime Video made the announcement on the 21st anniversary of the comic book's inception. Without delving too much into spoilers, Part 1 of Season 2 left fans on quite a cliffhanger. As Siddhant Adlakha wrote in his 8/10 review of Episode 4 for IGN, the midseason finale "minimizes the time spent on meandering subplots, and focuses most on the drama that works. "The two-part release structure of Season 2 is a new one for Invincible. Creator and executive producer described the decision as both a production-oriented and creative one in an interview with Collider over the summer, saying at the time, "when you see Episode 4 of Season 2, you may need a break. It's a big episode. It's definitely a mid-season finale kind of episode. "LoadingPlayKirkman has previously spoken about the struggles the show went through between Seasons 1 and 2, especially dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, resulting in the two-year wait in between installments. “It was the worst possible timing with the series launching in the middle of the pandemic and ramping back up to start Season 2 and Season 3, and also putting systems in place so that this doesn't happen again," he told me at last year's San Diego Comic-Con.
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