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I dislike a lot of the characters in 86.
For starters, they plopped way too many characters down at the beginning. Even now, the only fucking characters I can
name off the top my head are Milizé, Shin, Raiden, Anju,
Laughing Fox, and Gunslinger; notice how the last 2 aren’t even their real names but their military nicknames? Hell I don’t even know the name of the science chick, and that’s kinda sad.
Now, I get that the people I did manage to recall are basically the main cast, but why bother dumping all those expendable characters in the beginning then? I don’t even feel emotional or anything watching these expendables getting killed on and off-screen, because I
literally don’t know their names: I haven’t been able to establish a connection with them. And that to me is very cheap writing and character design.
Speaking of cheap character design, practically all the expendables had plain character designs like mob characters, which made it even harder to tell them apart from each other. I guess that makes sense since they were literally designed to be killed for “emotional impact” or something like that. However, the main cast is also way too similarly designed. It’s pretty much
just slight facial feature differences and hair style/color changes that you have to go off of. Like literally look at the MAL photos for Theoto and Daiya, and tell me the 2 don’t like 80-90% the same, smh.
On the other hand, I think the character design for Milizé is not bad.
[23][24] In 1979, Erving's teammate and center Darryl Dawkins twice shattered NBA backboards with dunks
leading to a quickly-enacted rule making it an offence to break the backboard. [citation needed] Technology has evolved to adapt to the increased strength and weight of players to withstand the force of such dunks, such as the breakaway rim (introduced to the NBA in 1981) changes to the material used for the backboards, and strengthening of the goal
standards themselves. The invention by Arthur Ehrat to create the breakaway rim with a spring on it led to the return of the dunk in college basketball. [24] All-star power forward Gus Johnson of the Baltimore Bullets was the first of the famous backboard breakers in the NBA, shattering three during his career in the 1960s and early 1970s. [25][b] Luke Jackson also shattered a backboard in 1968. [26] In the ABA, Charlie Hentz broke two backboards in the same game on 6 November 1970 resulting in the game being called.
[16] Media[edit] Manga[edit] Written and illustrated by Masakazu Ishiguro, Heavenly Delusion started in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Monthly Afternoon on January 25, 2018. [24] Kodansha has collected its chapters into individual tankōbon
volumes. The first volume was released on July 23, 2018;[25] a promotional video, directed by Tasuku Watanabe, for the first volume was released on the same date. [26] As of February 22, 2024, ten volumes have been released. [27] In North America, the series is licensed in English by Denpa. [28] The first volume was released on
December 31, 2019.