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Plus, when the action hits, it hits. Vivy’s sick-ass fight scenes feature some of the smoothest movie-quality sakuga animation I’ve seen in an anime series, which shouldn’t come as any surprise since Wit Studio is the same production company behind the first three seasons of Attack on Titan.
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slidesTo Your EternityList slidesTo Your Eternity AdvertisementNot many anime pass the three-episode test run from the jump, but To Your Eternity had me choking back tears from the first episode. To Your Eternity is the anime adaptation of Yoshitoki Ōima’s The Immortal. The series
follows an immortal creature called Fushi that starts its long existence as a rock before taking the forms of a wolf and human as it observes humanity. Ōima-san also happens to be the mangaka behind A Silent Voice, and its opening theme “Pink Blood” is sung by none other than Hikaru Utada, so my being moved to tears doesn’t come as a surprise. The show pulls no emotional punches. Alongside the show’s endearing depiction of humanity striving to do what it believes is best, To Your Eternity isn’t afraid to get heavy when moments of dread, betrayal, and death arise. But oddly enough, the show finds beauty in how Fushi comes to understand our flawed but endearing tendencies and sees through its cast’s shortcomings to help them reach the potential they have dormant within them. AdvertisementPrevious SlideNext Slide7 / 14List slidesBeastarsList slidesBeastars AdvertisementI can’t mention anthropomorphic anime without mentioning the king of the genre’s return in the second season of Beastars. Now that the oddity of Beastars’ premise is a reflection of our world’s racism, classism, sexism, and other “isms”, season two picks up with best boy Legoshi putting on his detective hat as he tries to figure out who murdered his friend Tem the alpaca.
"Culmination" (集大成, Shūtaisei) 137. "Last Step" (最後の一歩, Saigo no Ippo) 138. "One Mind in Two Bodies" (一心同体, Isshindōtai) 139. "Synchronize" (シンクロ, Shinkuro) 140. "Essence" (真髄, Shinzui) 17
December 17, 2021[49]978-4-06-526286-3January 17, 2023[50]978-1-68-491650-4 141. "Monster Trance" (怪物夢中(モンスタートランス), Monsutā Toransu) 142. "World Standard" (世界標準(ワールドスタンダード),
Wārudo Sutandādo) 143. "Not Alone" (ひとりじゃない, Hitori Janai) 144. "Disposition" (性癖, Seiheki) 145. "Born Slippy" 146. "Final Match-up" 147.
[5] Kun can mean different things depending on gender. Kun for females is a more respectful honorific than -chan, implying childlike cuteness. Kun is not only
used to address females formally; it can also be used for a very close friend or family member. Calling a female -kun is not insulting and can also mean that the person is respected, although that is not the normal implication. Rarely, sisters
with the same name, such as "Miku", may be differentiated by calling one "Miku-chan" and the other "Miku-san" or "-sama", and on some occasions,"-kun". Chan and -kun occasionally mean similar things. The general use of -kun for females implies respectful endearment and that the person being referred to is sweet and kind. In the National Diet (Legislature), the Speaker of the House uses -kun when addressing Diet members and ministers. An exception was when Takako Doi was the Speaker of the lower house, where she used the title -san. Chan[edit] Badges for sale bearing names suffixed with -chan Tan Chan (ちゃん) expresses that the speaker finds a person endearing. In general, -chan is used for young children, close friends, babies, grandparents and sometimes female adolescents.