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Mushoku Tensei wants to have its cake and eat it by being a pensive fantasy epic about redemption with immersive worldbuilding whilst incorporating trashy
seasonal ecchi power fantasy elements operating on hentai . logic into its narrative. Instead, the former narrative style gets engulfed by the latter because the author can’t help himself and the end result is a sum
lesser than the parts that reads
like a degenerate fanfiction masquerading as a coming-of-age story. This disconnect plagued the first season and jeopardized any prospect of Mushoku Tensei being a serious story, but the second season thoroughly exposes
this tonal and thematic mess as the failed assimilation of the two antithetical storytelling approaches that it is; this season only serving to expand the MC’s forced harem. To some, the insufferably grating MC is part of what makes this isekai special. In actuality, the series shows no signs of meta-commentary about this character chasing underage girls as a 21st-century first-world Japanese male inside a medieval fantasy world. The show instead fully embraces it and I suppose its only half-hearted attempt at self-awareness is always playing it off as laughs with the overreliance on vulgar humour. As with any joke, it stops being funny the nth time it's used. Rudeus is continuously shown to still have the mental age and awareness of a 34-year-old contemporary otaku through various forms of dialogue and his interactions with Man-God even depict him in his past-life state to reinforce that fact, yet the story does nothing meaningful about it in order to justify the very concept in which it's founded upon and lets him fully pursue his perversion.
^ Mateo, Alex (January 25, 2021). "Print
Market in Japan Decreases Only 1% in 2020,
Partly Due to 'Demon Slayer Boom'". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on January 26, 2021. Retrieved January 26, 2021. ^ 『CharaBiz DATA 2021(20)』5月末発刊決定! 今年で20冊目となるキャラビズ資料集の決定版.
4Stage plays 2. 5Audio drama 3Reception 4See also 5References 6External links Toggle the table of contents They Were Eleven 9 languages EspañolFrançais한국어HrvatskiItaliano日本語PolskiРусскийSrpskohrvatski / српскохрватски Edit links ArticleTalk
English ReadEditView history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Japanese science fiction manga series and its adaptations They Were ElevenCover of the 2019 reissued collected edition11人いる!
(Jūichinin Iru!)GenreScience fiction, suspense[1] MangaWritten byMoto HagioPublished byShogakukanEnglish publisherNA: DenpaMagazineBessatsu Shōjo ComicDemographicShōjoOriginal runSeptember 1975 (1975-09) – November 1975 (1975-11)Volumes1 MangaZoku Jūichinin Iru!Higashi no Chihei, Nishi no TowaWritten byMoto HagioPublished byShogakukanEnglish publisherNA: DenpaMagazineBessatsu Shōjo ComicDemographicShōjoOriginal runDecember 1976 (1976-12) – February 1977 (1977-02)Volumes1 Live-action television filmDirected byTōru MinegishiWritten byMamoru SasakiMusic byRyōhei HiroseOriginal networkNHKReleased January 2, 1977 (1977-01-02) Runtime45 minutes Anime filmDirected bySatoshi DezakiTsuneo TominagaWritten byToshiaki ImaizumiKazumi KoideMusic byYasuhiko FukudaStudioMagic BusLicensed byNA: Central Park Media (expired)Released November 1, 1986 (1986-11-01) Runtime91 minutes Stage plays They Were Eleven Axel: June 25, 2004 – July 11, 2004 Axel: December 26, 2008 – January 12, 2009 Studio Life: February 5, 2011 – March 27, 2011 Studio Life: January 10, 2013 – January 20, 2013 Studio Life: May 18, 2019 – June 2, 2019 Sequel manga series Studio Life: February 28, 2013 – April 7, 2013 Morning Musume '16: June 11, 2016 – June 26, 2016 Audio
dramaProduced byYoshiaki ImanishiShima YoshidaWritten byHikari OnoderaReleasedSeptember 25, 2013 (2013-09-25)Episodes8 They Were Eleven (Japanese: 11人いる!, Hepburn: Jūichinin Iru!) is a Japanese science fiction manga series written and illustrated by Moto Hagio. It was serialized in three issues of Shogakukan's Bessatsu Shōjo Comic magazine in 1975. The following year, it won the 21st Shogakukan Manga Award in the combined shōjo and shōnen category. The series has inspired a live-action television film, an anime film, multiple stage plays, and an audio drama CD. It also inspired a sequel manga series, Zoku Jūichinin Iru! Higashi no Chihei, Nishi no Towa (続・11人いる!東の地平・西の永遠, "They Were Eleven, Continued: Horizon of the East, Eternity of the West"), serialized in Bessatsu Shōjo Comic magazine from 1976 to 1977.