the kingdom of ruins
[103] In the 2009, Seiun Award, Code Geass R2 was a nominee in the category "Best Media Award". [104] Notes[edit] ^ a b In North America
through Crunchyroll (formerly
known as Funimation), in the United Kingdom through Crunchyroll UK and Ireland (formerly known as Manga Entertainment) and in Australia through Crunchyroll Store Australia (formerly known as Madman Anime). ^ In North America through Crunchyroll (formerly known as Funimation) and in Australia through Crunchyroll Store Australia (formerly known as Madman Anime). References[edit] ^ Ming Cha, Kai (March 1, 2010). "Code Geass Manga Expands at Bandai". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the
original on February 4, 2019. Retrieved February 4, 2019. ^ Osmond, Andrew (February 24, 2006). "Netflix Adds Code Geass". Anime News Network.
02. Archived from the original on April 4, 2021.
Retrieved April 4, 2021. ^ Hodgkins, Crystalyn (August 8, 2021). "JoJo's Bizarre Adventure
Part 6: Stone Ocean Anime Reveals Promo Video, Cast, Staff, December Debut on Netflix Worldwide". Anime News Network.
He called Yu Yu Hakusho one of the few series of its
kind to "actually kinda make you feel bad for how fist-pumpingly cool the battles are", as it darts from a spirited contest between warriors into the psychological ramifications of pursuing such battles. [17] Ash Parrish of The Verge praised the performances of Kitamura and Uesugi, as well as the "authentic" and well-choreographed action sequences. A fan of the YuYu Hakusho anime adaptation, Parrish understood why Netflix chose the plot points that
they did, but found the condensing of the story into five hour-long episodes left "characters that are formless, uninteresting seat-fillers" in high school production-quality costumes. [18] In a critical review, Tokyo Weekender's Cezary Jan Strusiewicz found the show "very dark. Not just tonally like the manga and anime, but also color-wise". Labeling original creator Yoshihiro Togashi a master of weaving together serious plot and tear-jerking character moments with wacky cartoon humor, Strusiewicz felt Netflix doubled-down on the darkness and drama, but "when you pair that with a character shooting demons with his magical finger gun, the effect is comical in all the wrong ways. " Although he called the show "disappointing", Strusiewicz wrote that one must give credit to the "phenomenal" action scenes. [19] Viewership[edit] Netflix announced that YuYu Hakusho was number one on its list of non-English-language rankings in its first week of release, with 7. 7 million total views and 32. 1 million hours viewed. [20] It ranked in the top 10 in 76 countries, and ranked number one in seven of them.