gushing over magical girls anime stream
No other seinen fantasy manga has such well-developed characters with such deep backstories, even for the minor characters. "[80] Matt Fagaly, writing for Crunchyroll, analyzed Berserk's use of shōnen and shōjo manga tropes in the Lost Children arc (volumes 14–16), which resulted in an "entirely original and moving narrative. " Fagaly commented about the arc protagonist, Jill, and her hopeful words at the end of that story, further adding: "I have never seen another Shonen or Shojo express this
notion with the same audacity, depth, and idiosyncrasy as Berserk. "[228] Carl Kimlinger, writing for ANN, in his review of the thirty-fifth volume, compared Guts' "monster-plagued" trip to Elfhelm to the fantasy tales of Robert E. Howard and, in comparing the volume to the previous ones, he wrote that series dropped down a notch, although he stated that it was not a "disastrous drop," but "just the series falling back into a comfortable, classical adventure mode. "[229] Brittany Vincent of Otaku USA said: "Berserk is undoubtedly one of the most unique and engaging Western-style fantasies of all time. "[90] Writing for Syfy Wire, Eric Frederiksen said: "Berserk is one of the longest-running manga, and consistently one of the darkest out there, but also one of the most emotionally powerful and rewarding. "[77] Writing for Crunchyroll, Peter Fobian expressed: "Berserk is one of the most deeply personal works I've ever read,
both for myself and in my perception of Miura's works. The series' transformation in the past 30 years artistically and
thematically is so singular it's difficult to find another work that comes close. "[230] Miura's artwork has been particularly praised by critics. Bertschy said that the artwork is where Berserk "really shines," adding: "The cross-hatching work, the level of detail, it's all stunning.
The
actor claimed that Season 1 was "tame compared to what's to come next" in the show's sophomore outing: “If they follow it as fatefully as they do, I’m so so so excited for a lot of the other devils and fiends to get their time to shine because the show gets so much more weird and fun and strange and sad. There’s a lot. So many people are just finding this show through the anime and it’s going to take
them on such a rollercoaster. And I’m just excited to see how people respond to it all [. ] Honestly, season one is tame compared to what’s to come next. ”Based on what Season 1 covered, there's a strong chance that Chainsaw Man Season 2 could end up exploring the "Bomb Girl Arc" and the "International Assassins Arc" from the manga. Whatever the case, Denji's killing spree seems to be far from over.
Kizaru asks Luffy why he is protecting Dr. Vegapunk, but Luffy retorts by asking why he
wants to kill him anyway. Kizaru warps far away from Luffy and admits he does not personally want to kill him because he has known him for a long time, but does not have a choice. With blinding speed, Kizaru kicks Luffy so hard he flies into Vegaforce-01, completely destroying it and sending him into the Frontier Dome's barrier. The Thousand Sunny falls out of the destroyed robot's hands as Franky, Bonney, and Lilith run away from the exploding robot. Kizaru confronts the two and comments how much Bonney has grown, and he asks why she is getting in his way of killing Dr. Vegapunk, who she is supposed to hate. Bonney, however, grabs a wire and uses Toshi Tsuki, declaring that her target has shifted. Kizaru easily dodges her, asks her not to make him hurt anyone else he knows, and then kicks her into the barrier as well. Franky charges up a Radical Beam, but Kizaru has disappeared. Franky realizes where Kizaru must be going and contacts Usopp to warn him just as Dr.