one piece new opening sekai no owari
The two become the best of friends on the pitch and real life, forming a partnership soon to be renowned as the "Golden Duo" or "dynamic duo" of Nankatsu. Soon Tsubasa and his Nankatsu team start taking on the best of elementary school
football, meeting such talented players as Kojiro Hyuga, Ken Wakashimazu, Jun Misugi, Hikaru Matsuyama and many others. Tsubasa's Nankatsu
squad wins numerous youth national championships and he wins the U-17 World Championships for Japan by defeating Italy 2–1, Argentina 5–4 in the group stages, France 4–4 (5–4 p) in the semifinals and eventually defeat West Germany 3–2 in the finals before leaving the country to play in Brazil. World Youth[edit] Tsubasa leaves Japan for Brazil and starts playing, with his mentor Roberto as the manager, for São Paulo[1] (F. C.
Brancos in the anime),[2] in Brazil's premier professional league, Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, winning the final against Flamengo (F. C. Domingos in the anime) 4–3. While in Brazil, Tsubasa gets to meet several talented Brazilian players, such as his teammate and roommate Pepe, who comes from a humble background, as well Flamengo star striker Carlos Santana, a prodigious yet emotionless talent. Enthusiastic football-loving youngster Shingo Aoi, whom Tsubasa once played against while in the high school national championships, leaves Japan to play football in Italy, where he hopes to play for a major Italian professional team. After arriving in Italy, however, Shingo gets tricked by a man who gives him fraudulent promises of getting him selected for an Italian team.
3
Shōya Chiba (Kiyotaka Ayanokōji) 5. 4 Masaaki Mizunaka (Kakeru Ryūen) 5. 5 Akari Kitō (Suzune Horikita) 5. 6 Ayana Taketatsu (Kei Karuizawa) 5. 7 Yurika Kubo (Kikyō Kushida) 5. 8 Ryōta Ōsaka (Yōsuke Hirata) 5.
[104] A social card battle game developed by Cybird was released in Japan on August 28, 2011, for mobile phones. [105] Reception[edit] The North American DVD release of Samurai Champloo was a commercial success. [106] The final volumes were ranked by Nielsen VideoScan as among the top ten best-selling anime DVDs during mid-January 2006. [107] On review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, the anime has a rating of 88% based on eight reviews. [108] The Western home media releases saw positive responses for their visual and sound quality, though a
lack of extras was noted. [109][110][111] Tasha Robinson, in a review of the first English DVD release for Sci-Fi Weekly, was concerned about the opening episode's similarity to the set-up for Cowboy Bebop. [3] In a similar review for Play Magazine, Dave Halverson noted his enjoyment of the story but felt readers should see the anime with as little story information as possible. [112] DVDTalk's Todd Douglass noted the simple premise of the story, but enjoyed each episode's plot and praised the interactions of the main cast and its sense of style. [109] Nick Browne of THEM Anime was less positive, faulting its
weaker multi-episode stories and uneven treatment of serious cultural issues despite enjoying the humor born from its main cast. [110] Salvan Bonaminio of The Escapist described the main cast as stereotypes, faulted the forgettable supporting cast, and called many episodes including the ending underwhelming. [113] James Beckett of Anime News Network enjoyed the main cast, but negatively cited a lack of cohesion across the series, and strongly criticised Fuu's frequent kidnappings for story purposes as detrimental to her character.