scantrad manhwa
The most these characters get is a flashback during their fight. The manga excelled at fleshing out all the characters and the anime seems focused on getting to the next fight as quickly as possible. Another bizarre change is that in the manga there's a character named Adam Dudley, a fighter from Texas. He's a rude and vulgar man with "FUCK" engraved on his teeth. Oddly enough this was changed to "DAMN" in the anime. It's a minor change but it feels unnecessary. He's still just as foul-mouthed as he was before, so why change it at all?
If there's one positive thing I can say about the anime, it's that the music is pretty decent. The opening song is good, even if the visuals of the opening leave a lot to be desired. The ending song is terrible, the rap does not complement the series at all. The background music does its
best at trying to get the audience
hyped for the fights and would succeed if not for the fights themselves didn't look so bad. The voice actors are fantastic for the most part
Daisuke Namikawa is absolutely perfect as Kiryu Setsuna, he gives the best performance in the show.
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Plot and setting[edit] See also: List of
Castlevania characters Castlevania series fictional chronology Original series 1094: Lament of Innocence
1476: Dracula's Curse
1479: Curse of Darkness
1576: The Adventure
1591: Belmont's Revenge
1691: Castlevania
1698: Simon's Quest
1748: Harmony of Dissonance
1792: Rondo of Blood
1797: Symphony of the Night
1800s: Order of Ecclesia
1917: Bloodlines
1944: Portrait of Ruin
2035: Aria of Sorrow
2036: Dawn of Sorrow
Lords of Shadow series 1047: Lords of Shadow
1073–1101: Mirror of Fate
1102–2057: Lords of Shadow 2 Sources:[41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48] The Castlevania franchise heavily references the horror films produced by Universal Pictures and Hammer Film Productions. [7] Creator of the series, Hitoshi Akamatsu, wanted players to feel like they were in a classic horror film. [49] Werewolves, zombies, Frankenstein's monster, and Count Dracula make recurring appearances. [7] Alucard, introduced in Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse, is a reference to the character of the same name
from the 1943 film, Son of Dracula. [50] The games include folklore and mythological monsters such as Medusa,[51] as well as direct references to literary horror. [52] Castlevania: Bloodlines explicitly incorporates the events of Bram Stoker's Dracula into the series,[53] and the recurring character Carmilla is based on the 1872 novel Carmilla by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu.