the newbie is too strong chapitre 732-
Slam Dunk and Dragonball, both are great manga with terrible adaptions. One Piece is a pretty good manga with an even
worse adaption then the aforementioned Toei disappointments.
And what . are the shared
issues between all three, that cause them to be poor adaptions? The horrible weekly schedule,
which leads to poor direction, bad pacing and terrible production values.
Arcs get dragged out for ludicrous amounts of time,
deflating the tension week by week as we wait for something to happen.
Story: it's One Piece, it's looney tunes lord of the rings for kids and their families. I'm generally fond of the story, I mean I haven't stopped watching it yet.
Characters: due to its length, One Piece characters do tend to feel very static, but they're charming enough to usually get you through whatever meandering plot thread is being covered in the episode you're watching (and the subsequent 20 that plot will run through).
Themes: don't trust the government kids, treasure your friends and help out when you can.
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. As Legoshi’s sleuthing gets him closer to finding the killer, his wayward friend Louis, a deer, finds himself on the opposite end of justice as the new head of a yakuza family of lions called the Shishigumi. Beastar’s second season builds on what made its first season so appealing.
[12] He also said that the inner feelings of every individual is one of the series' main themes. [12] Isayama later would confirm that Attack on Titan was inspired in part by Muv-Luv Alternative, the second visual novel in the Muv-Luv visual novel series. [13] Isayama also noted that his
image of carnivorous titans was inspired by Gyaos from the Gamera franchize, The War of the Gargantuas, Man-eating Mona Lisa from the Jigoku Sensei Nūbē series, and dinosaurs from the Jurassic Park series. [14][15][16] Isayama estimated his basic monthly timeline as one week to
storyboard and three weeks to actually draw the chapter. The story was planned out in advance, even marking down in which collected volumes a specific "truth" would be revealed. [10] In September 2013, he stated that he was aiming to end the series in 20 collected volumes. [17] Originally, Isayama planned to give the series a tragic conclusion similar to that of the film adaptation of Stephen King's The Mist, where every character dies. Positive response to the manga and anime caused the author to consider changing the ending due to the impact it could have on fans. [18][19] In November 2018, the Japanese documentary program Jōnetsu Tairiku aired an episode about Isayama's struggles to complete the manga, in which he confirmed that Attack on Titan has entered its final story arc. [20] In December 2019, Isayama said he was planning to end the manga in 2020. [21] In June 2020, Isayama stated that there was only 5% of the manga left, and he expected to end it in the upcoming year, closing off the original story line of the series by finally bringing the plot to its conclusion.