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Megumi Kato Megumi is Tomoya's classmate. Unlike Eriri and Utaha, she is portrayed as an ordinary girl with no distinctive character. She is a good-looking girl but doesn't stand out in class at all. She knows little about otaku culture but never keeps Tomoya at arm's length. Her attitude toward Tomoya is often described as furatto (フラット?). She is the model for Meguri, one of the main heroines of the game being produced by Blessing Software. Utaha Kasumigaoka Utaha is an up-and-coming young novelist. She is a student in class 3C and wearing two hats as a student and a writer. She writes her novels under the pen name of Utako Kasumi (霞 詩子 Kasumi Utako). Her first novel Koisuru Metronome (恋するメトロノーム Koisuru Metoronōmu, lit. The Metronome in Love) was published under the Fushikawa Fantastic Bunko imprint and sold over 500,000 copies.

Luckily, Emul teleports him on top of Mud-Digger, turning his fall into an overpowered headbutt that kills Mud-Digger instantly. Rakuro is pleased by the victory but disappointed in himself for using Emul since she is stronger than him. Approaching Thirdrema, Emul disguises as a human girl, though Rakuro only wearing shorts still draws unwanted attention. Unfortunately the photograph of him has spread and players now know he has a unique NPC and has fought Lycagon, bringing him to the attention of Psyger, a member of Rei's Lycagon hunter clan, as well as many members of Ashura Kai, an assassin clan that kill other players for fun. Rakuro is accosted by Animalia, an animal obsessed player who wants her own vorpal rabbit NPC. Suddenly, they are ambushed by Arthur Pencilgon, a level 99 player killer, who has come for Rakuro.

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Amazon. com. Archived from the original on September 13, 2023. Retrieved December 21, 2009. ^ 幽遊白書 パーフェクトファイル No. 2 (ジャンプコミックスセレクション) [Yū Yū Hakusho Perfect File No. 2] (in Japanese). 1995. ISBN 4834214427. ^ 幽・遊・白書 冥界死闘編 炎の絆 3 (ジャンプコミックスセレクション) [Yū Yū Hakusho: Edge of the Netherworld Bonds of Fire 3 Jump Comics] (in Japanese). 1994. With the Kamogawa gym members interested in trying the Numbering System out, Ippo shouted numbers out for them until they got angry due to Ippo only calling out a left jab. Overhearing how Takamura went overseas after defeating Goat, Ippo was reminded how Sendō declared his intention of going overseas to Mexico, wondering what came of that. Later, Ippo found out Sendō went to Mexico without telling his gym from Mari. Since Mari and Sendō's gym does not know the reason he left, Ippo told Mari how he possibly went to Mexico to meet Alfredo. Later, Ippo was shown a news article about Sendō and Hoshi meeting the Scamaras Brothers. Importance of the Support Role Arc Ippo walking Aikawa home.
[5] According to Zoe Leung of Hypebeast, this made it the streaming service's biggest world premiere event to date. [5] The entire five-episode series premiered on Netflix on December 14, 2023. [12][13] Reception[edit] Critical response[edit] Review aggregator Metacritic reported that YuYu Hakusho holds a weighted average score of 70 out of 100, based on 4 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [14] Joshua Kristian McCoy of Game Rant praised YuYu Hakusho as one of the best live-action adaptations of a manga or anime series, placing it alongside the Rurouni Kenshin films. Although noting that the plot condensing erases much of the original manga's nuance, leaving emotional moments little time to breathe, McCoy called it a "solid action/horror/drama in its own right" that is designed to steer newcomers toward the source material. [15] IGN's Juan Barquin called the show a delightful retelling, albeit condensed, that manages to capture the tone and characterization that makes the original "so charming". He praised the excellent characterization of the core duo of Yusuke and Kuwabara, but found Mishima's scripting falters when it comes to the supporting characters due to the pacing required of a five-episode series. [16] Daniel Dockery of Polygon also found the Netflix adaptation to effectively capture the wild tonal shifts and the characters that has made the franchise adored for the last 33 years, but said its length does a disservice to some crucial moments. He called Yu Yu Hakusho one of the few series of its kind to "actually kinda make you feel bad for how fist-pumpingly cool the battles are", as it darts from a spirited contest between warriors into the psychological ramifications of pursuing such battles. [17] Ash Parrish of The Verge praised the performances of Kitamura and Uesugi, as well as the "authentic" and well-choreographed action sequences. A fan of the YuYu Hakusho anime adaptation, Parrish understood why Netflix chose the plot points that they did, but found the condensing of the story into five hour-long episodes left "characters that are formless, uninteresting seat-fillers" in high school production-quality costumes.