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"Japan's Animation Blu-ray Disc Ranking,
October 15–21".
Anime News Network. Archived from the original on November 15, 2022. Retrieved October 23, 2018. Loo, Egan (October 23, 2018). "Japan's Animation DVD Ranking, October 15–21". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on October 18, 2021. Retrieved October 23, 2018. ^ Blu-ray and DVD rankings: Loo, Egan (November 20, 2018). "Japan's Animation Blu-ray Disc Ranking, November 12–18".
Hajime no Ippo: The Fighting! DS
Original release date(s):
JP:
December 4, 2008[45] Release years by system:
2008—Nintendo DS Notes: Published by D3 Publisher. Hajime no Ippo: The Fighting!
Original release date(s):
JP: December 11, 2014[46] Release years by system:
2014—PlayStation 3 Notes: Published by Bandai Namco Games Reception[edit] Hajime no Ippo won the 15th Kodansha Manga Award in the shōnen category in 1991. [47] The series also received a Special Award at the 43rd Kodansha Manga Award, commemorating 110 years since Kodansha's
founding in 2019. [48] On TV Asahi's Manga Sōsenkyo 2021 poll, in which 150,000 people voted for their top 100 manga series, Hajime no Ippo ranked 47th. [49] By September 2008, the Hajime no Ippo manga had over 73 million copies in circulation. [50] By November 2019, it had over 96 million copies in circulation. [51] By July 2023, it had over 100 million copies in circulation. [52] Anime Academy gave the first anime series a glowing response; all five reviewers rated it above 90%, with one referring to the series as "the cream of the crop" of the sports genre in anime, and another stating that "fighting and character development have never tangoed so well together". [53] Gia Manry of Fanboy. com listed the series as one of their "Top Ten Underrated Manga". [54] IGN listed Hajime no Ippo: Rising among the best anime series of the 2010s.
Things will be moving toward the single OBVIOUS direction, someone will randomly pop in with some utter buffoon shit which, in the mind of any reasonable fucking person on the planet, would only make themselves seem more suspicious than the person they’re accusing, but everyone will just be like, “OMG that’s so smart! I didn’t even think of it like that! So let’s all adopt that line of thinking now and go the complete opposite direction so the contrivance that is this stupid fucking game can keep being turned into a shitty anime!” It’s SO all over the place with who is and isn’t playing 4D chess! In one set-up, one character will be a smirking, Machiavellian edgelord engineering the psychology of everyone around them, and in the next, it’s someone completely different. Whoever needs to be the devil on the shoulder of whichever character can successfully become so instantly, and if the person they need to manipulate actually had their wits about them in previous scenes, their wits will very quickly be not-so-about them, and they’ll prance
blindly into whatever trap they need to prance into to keep the contrivance train rolling. The resulting mess is too frustrating for words, and while the characters are all horribly written, I guess the show succeeded in making you emotionally engage with them anyway, because their braindead decision-making will—I promise—make you want to tear your Goddamn eyes out. Whether a character is saying something totally daft and unreasonable while everyone else is treating them like the prophet, or for no reason refusing to say the ONE expectable and reasonable thing any real human being would say in their situation while everyone else is acting like their behavior is a legitimate smoking gun, the level of contrivance required for conflict makes every character feel downright detached and confusing whenever you actually try putting yourself in their shoes.
But forget about our cast of miserable non-characters for just a minute and let it sink in how stupid this is
purely from a plot perspective. For example, in one episode they’re playing a game where they get to anonymously expose awful things about one another, and the live audience moves each of them closer toward final condemnation by voting for who they hate as they grow to dislike each of the characters based on what’s revealed about them.