the aristocrat's otherworldly adventure characters season 2
I can't speak on the dub but it does have veterans like Johnny Yong Bosch so it should be pretty
good even if they used the same actors for multiple roles unlike the Japanese version which is understandable.
- Enjoyment
This is where I'm going to diverge from looking at the anime as is.
Honestly it was just ok. Even before the anime aired I knew it would be hard to adapt it
properly and I was correct. A lot of character interaction was axed as well other events that took place before the tournament started that are referenced later in sub plots and in the plot itself. What makes Kengan Ashura is its characters
more than the fights.
In the manga they're so individualized with their personalities. We don't get to see that in the anime due to them removing interactions. In turn it just makes the whole show feel like a bare bones
adaption that's too fast paced. The anime rushes from fight to fight with just enough plot so you don't get completely lost. I can understand why they did this though.
The body proportions of human anime characters tend to accurately reflect the proportions of the human body in reality. The height of the head is considered by the artist as the base unit of proportion. Head heights can vary, but most anime characters are about seven to eight heads tall. [65] Anime artists occasionally make deliberate modifications to body proportions to produce super deformed characters that feature a disproportionately small body compared to the head; many super deformed characters are two to four heads tall. Some anime works like Crayon Shin-chan completely disregard these proportions, in such a way that
they resemble caricatured Western cartoons. Wikipe-tan (#1) portrayed in various anime art styles. Counting from No. 2 to 9, each art style base: original work, Kyoto Animation, Naruto, Type-Moon, Case Closed, Sailor Moon, Fujiko Fujio, Studio Ghibli, and Makoto Shinkai. A common anime character design convention is exaggerated eye size. The animation of characters with large eyes in anime can be traced back to Osamu Tezuka, who was
deeply influenced by such early animation characters as Betty Boop, who was drawn with disproportionately large eyes. [66] Tezuka is a central figure in anime and manga history, whose iconic art style and character designs allowed for the entire range of human emotions to be depicted solely through the eyes.
of seasons6No. of episodes240 (list of episodes)ProductionExecutive producers Ben Bocquelet Daniel Lennard Michael Carrington Sarah Fell Patricia Hidalgo Mic Graves Producers Joanna Beresford Ellen Collins Sarah Fell Editors Richard Overall Tony Hull Lucy Benson Running time11 minutes[1]Production company Cartoon Network Development Studio Europe[a] Original releaseNetworkCartoon NetworkRelease3 May 2011 (2011-05-03) –
present The Amazing World of
Gumball (also known simply as Gumball or by its abbreviation TAWOG) is an animated sitcom created by Ben Bocquelet for Cartoon Network. [2] The series concerns the lives of 12-year-old Gumball Watterson, an anthropomorphic blue cat, and adoptive goldfish brother Darwin, who attend middle school in the fictional city of Elmore, California. They often find themselves in various shenanigans around the city, during which they interact with fellow family members—younger sister Anais, mother Nicole, and father Richard—along with an extended supporting cast of characters. Bocquelet
based several of the series' characters on rejected characters from his previous commercial work while making its premise a mixture of "family shows and school shows", which Cartoon Network was heavily interested in. [3] After Bocquelet pitched The Amazing World of Gumball to the network, Turner Broadcasting executive Daniel Lennard green-lit the production of the series.