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" [52] Yukimura praised the adaptation, believing
that it smoothed out pacing issues present in the original manga, and that the anime's staff
understood the story better than he did. He further recommended that
people watch the anime before picking up the manga. [53] Askeladd in particular remained as one of the most famous characters for the first season due to his mentorship over Thorfinn and Canute despite his villain-like characterization. [54][55] Hajime Isayama, the creator of Attack on Titan, was surprised by Askeladd's death, most specifically by how Wit Studio animated it in the season finale. [56] The second season's premiere earned praise by several writers from Anime News Network for focusing on the violence in Einar's backstory, fitting in with the elements of violence displayed in the first season. [57] According to Escapist Magazine, Einar is part of the cycle of violence and revenge the series portrays as a theme due to how the anime further shows the downfall of his family at the hands of Vikings and starts hating warriors. While this initially
causes his anger towards Thorfinn for being a former warrior, his avoidance from attacking him marks a departure of the theme in the series and, most notably, in Thorfinn. [58] Both Anime News Network and Fandom Post acclaimed the episode where Thorfinn realizes mistakes of his life as a Viking and makes an oath to never use violence again with the former site calling it the "defining episode of the entire series" due to the impact it has on the protagonist. [59][60] The Daily Star agreed and found that Thorfinn's mundane life as a slave brings intriguing stories about "redemption and self-discovery" even if it was imperfect. [61] The climax was praised for the handling of Thorfinn and Canute. Polygon compared Thorfinn's interactions with Canute with Shigeo Kageyama and Naruto Uzumaki's alternatives options besides violence to end conflicts; In particular, Thorfinn's new wisdom when learning about Christianity and telling Canute's army "I have no enemies" were one of the biggest highlights of the anime as a result of redefining himself rather than going back to his Viking roots.
Main character is your typical Shounen protagonist, except with all the humanity and relatability removed. Instead of him having any likable traits at all, he starts as a blank piece of
overpowered paper that is practically the definition of mary sue, with typical ignorance and stupidity to force a false sense of "endearing-ness" onto the character. He's so woefully uninteresting and unsympathetic, they force a relative death on him AND force him to ponder some meaningless shallow morality in the first three episodes just so that the audience doesn't tune out before they get to introducing all the other trite annoying quirky characters. And yes, they are trite quirky and annoying. There's a guy who beats you up if you don't agree with him on what type of woman is sexy, a guy who only speaks in rice ball ingredients, a girl who is inexplicably a douche, a bunch of random characters with shallow personalities and really hard-to-care-about backstories that interrupt the good animation. Also starring literally kakashi from naruto but more smug, literally shigaraki from MHA but more coherent, and literally kurama from naruto but more evil. Shounen keeps up its tradition of only adding characters based entirely on one note quirks that My Hero Academia unfortunately normalized. Additionally, they thought it was a good idea to add in a character who's the most overpowered guy of all time, has no weaknesses, isn't inspiring, poses no
significant threat to the "heroes", and doesn't serve to make the main character's grow at all. Worst of all, they made him as generically attractive as possible to draw in the female fanbase. So in short.
"Embracing
Your Ambitions in the
Light (Part 7)" 90. "Embracing Your Ambitions in the Light (Part 8)" 91. "Embracing Your Ambitions in the Light (Part 9)" 92. "Embracing Your Ambitions in the Light (Part 10)" 93. "Embracing Your Ambitions in the Light (Part 11)" 94. "Embracing Your Ambitions in the Light (Part 12)" 95. "Embracing Your Ambitions in the Light (Part 13)" 11 December 16, 2022[49][50]978-4-06-529989-0
978-4-06-529990-6 (LE)May 2, 2023 (digital)[51]
April 30, 2024 (print)[52]978-1-68491-929-1 (digital)
978-1-64651-949-1 (print) 96. "Once in a Lifetime, Over and Over" 97. "What Do You Game For? – Oikatzo's Reply" 98. "What Do You Game For? – Pencilgon's Reply" 99. "A Straight Flush, With a Joker Mixed In" 100.