perfect blue arabic
Jinwoo then sets out on a journey as he fights against all kinds of enemies, both man and monster, to discover the secrets of the dungeons and the true source of his powers. Characters[edit] Sung Jin-woo
Voiced by: Taito Ban[6] (Japanese); Aleks Le[7] (English) Japanese name: Shun Mizushino (水篠 旬, Mizushino Shun) Sung Jin-woo (성진우; Seong Jin-u) is the main protagonist of the series. Originally an infamously
weak E-Rank hunter, he gets the chance of a lifetime when he is selected as the Player of a magical program called the System and gains the unique ability to grow in strength without limit. By taking advantage of this new power offered to him by the System, Jinwoo eventually rises up to become humanity's greatest hunter, but also eventually finds himself to be a major player in a war that has been going on forever between the Rulers and the Monarchs, two groups of unbelievably powerful humanoids who have their own agendas with mankind. Yoo Jin-ho Voiced by: Genta Nakamura[6] (Japanese); Justin Briner[7] (English) Japanese name: Kenta Morobishi (諸菱 賢太, Morobishi Kenta) Yoo Jin-ho (유진호; Yu Jin-ho) is a Korean D-Rank Hunter and Jinwoo's best friend. He comes from a very wealthy family and eventually becomes the vice chairman of Jinwoo's guild after he impresses the latter with his sense of loyalty and commitment. Jinho also shares a brother-like relationship with Jinwoo, due to the fact that he is estranged from his biological brother and tends to dress up in very fancy and expensive armor that he usually buys from foreign manufacturers, which serves as a prominent running gag throughout the series. Sung Jin-ah Voiced by: Haruna Mikawa[8] (Japanese); Rebecca Wang[7] (English) Japanese name: Aoi Mizushino (水篠 葵, Mizushino Aoi) Sung Jinah (성진아; Seong Jin-a) is Jinwoo's younger sister. Unlike her brother, she is not a hunter and is a student in high school. Park Kyung-hye Japanese name: Satoko Mizushino (水篠 聡子, Mizushino Satoko) Park Kyung-hye (박경혜; Bak Gyeong-hye) is Jinwoo and Jinah's mother. Four years before the events of the main storyline, she suddenly became ill with Eternal Slumber, an incurable and magically induced sleeping disorder, and fell
into a coma soon after, forcing Jinwoo to take over as the breadwinner of the family in her place.
^ a b c "Interview : Hiromu Arakawa". Animeland (in French). Asuka Editions (189). January 2013. Archived from the original on October 22, 2015. Retrieved September 10, 2013. ^ a b Finet, Nicolas (2008). Dicomanga: le dictionnaire
encyclopédique de la bande dessinée japonaise (1st ed. ). Paris: Fleurus.
ISBN 9782215079316.
Already, this left an appalling first impression. It was just awkward? I’ve seen my fair share of ecchi anime with perverted characters, but this was already having me have second thoughts
about continuing a few minutes into episode 1. The first episode pulls no punches in showing how much of a trash Rudeus is, as he scrounges for panties of women in his house even before he turns one.
What follows are several time skips within a few episodes until Rudeus turns seven. The start is pretty generic, but I’ll be honest, it’s kinda interesting. If you get rid of the problems many people, including me, have with the portrayal of some issues, then the first season of Mushoku Tensei becomes a polished version of what a lot of other isekai try and fail over and over again. Some do it with some success, but those are few amongst the can of worms that the isekai genre is. So Mushoku Tensei undeniably falls on the better side of the isekai scale, lopsided as that scale may be.
Mushoku Tensei fans like to call it the “Grandfather/Mother of isekai”, but I doubt the validity of these claims because several other popular isekai novels had already come out before it, and SAO (talking about the anime here)
might not be an isekai, depending on what your definition of isekai is, but that’s the one that started off the boom of what has basically become a genre now.
Talking about fans, some fans even claim that the people who have issues with pedophilia, rape, etc and how the anime portrays these in good light, are soft snowflakes. According to them, anyone who thinks these things are actually a problem shouldn’t use their own morals on a show.