dessin manga kawaii shidou blue lock colored
Suzume notices the worm emerging again, and the two follow it. The worm takes a huge form in the sky and the two fly over it. Daijin reappears and reveals he has passed on his function as a keystone to Souta. Souta suddenly turns into a keystone and Suzume reluctantly uses him to lock-up the giant worm. Suzume wakes up at a shrine housing the Tokyo gate, where she sees Souta in the Ever-After, but is unable to enter the door. Daijin appears and Suzume gets angry at him and tells him not to come back.
[Written by MAL Rewrite]EditBackgroundTengoku Daimakyou was released on Blu-ray in two volumes from August 30, 2023, to September 27, 2023. Visit MALxJapan MALxJapan -More than just anime- Your guide to 2024's Must-Read Manga is here 📖 Answer the Anime & Manga Survey to help shape the future of streaming Puppies, monster meat and k-pop loving yakuza?!?—here are Kodansha's top picks 📚 EditRelated AnimeAdaptation:Tengoku Daimakyou
More charactersCharacters & Voice Actors Kiruko Main Senbongi, Sayaka
Japanese Maru Main Satou, Gen
Japanese Mimihime Supporting Fukuen, Misato
Japanese Usami Supporting Takeuchi, Shunsuke
Japanese Shiro Supporting Takeuchi, Shunsuke
Japanese Ooma Supporting Kino, Hina
Japanese Kona Supporting Toyonaga, Toshiyuki
Japanese Totori Supporting Matsuoka, Misato
Japanese Juuichi Supporting Sakuya, Shunsuke
Japanese Tokio Supporting Yamamura, Hibiku
Japanese
More staff Staff Morihiro, Fumi Producer Kamei, Hiroshi Producer Cao, Cong Producer Yonezawa, Akira Producer
Edit Opening Theme Preview Spotify Apple Music Amazon Music Youtube Music "innocent arrogance" by BiSH Edit Ending Theme "innocent arrogance" by BiSH (eps 1) "誰も彼も何処も何も知らない" by ASOBI同盟 (eps 2-7) "誰も彼も何処も何も知らない (#08 Special Arrange" by ASOBI同盟 (eps 8)
Reviews Write review 106 Recommended 42 Mixed Feelings 23 Not Recommended All reviews (171) Jun 24, 2023 Mcsuper Recommended The theme of finding hope in a seemingly hopeless or dark world has been done before, in a slice of life way in Girls’ Last Tour, in a lovecraftian horror form in Made in Abyss, or in many other ways of which I haven’t seen before. Tengoku Daimakyo takes this theme, but has a sci-fi mystery backdrop to it, making it quite a unique experience, and one I haven’t really experienced personally.
What do we want from a sci-fi mystery show? Do we want twists and turns, dark reveals, or unpredictability? Tengoku Daimakyo has all of that, but it also has the one narrative technique I . appreciate the most in media, which is “show, don’t tell”. This anime masterfully handles that by giving us virtually no real direction on the surface, but encourages the viewer to ponder on the events of each episode, pay attention to how the characters act, and recall past events to make a scene or reveal hit that much harder. It’s an anime that can generate a lot of discourse because it is just so mind-bending at times, and confusing, in the most wonderful of ways.