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(こんな世界、知りたくなかった。)" by Miku Sawai (eps 1-14) 2: "Tsuki Akari (月灯り)" by Sora Amamiya (eps 15-24)Reviews Write review 388 Recommended 160 Mixed Feelings 116 Not Recommended All reviews (664) Dec 15, 2014 HelghastKillzone Recommended Produced by White Fox Studios as 24 episode series, Akame ga Kill! is the anime adaptation of an unfinished manga that follows the exploits of an assassination group looking to overthrow the corrupt empire. While it doesn't even have good writing or the proper foundations, there is no denying that this show takes its audience for a wild ride that is filled with bloodshed and explosions.
Set in a fantasy world, Akame ga Kill! begins with a talented but rather naive swordsman named Tatsumi, arriving in Empire's capital city and dreaming of making a name for himself. He quickly finds himself being stripped .
the direct result of the Pierrot adaptation of 170 episodes that could have easily been reduced to one third of it. Instead of elevating the material to help the manga's best qualities to shine, they buried it under a ton of poorly paced antics and bad animation - especially in the beginning. Now, not that the manga had much more to say, but it could offer some beautiful action scenes to keep you hooked. Unfortunately for its anime adaptation, it was chosen to replace Naruto Shippuden's endless cicle of Action Anime for Little Boys by WSJ TM, consisting of what I am hoping was the last attempt to "endless" shounen battle anime. But, judging by the content, would you really blame the staff for choosing this one to sacrifice?
Black Clover has only one original thing to offer to its audience: That there is remarkably absolutely nothing original about it. Every character bit, every plotline, every flashback, absolutely freaking everything about it, has been copied shamelessly from other better manga that came before it. The one common characteristic of successfull series is that, even when they borrow themes from previous ones, they all have something of their own they want to say. When the author gives out something to the world, it is because his sense of self has something he wants to convey to a larger audience, and that is becoming obvious as the series presses on. The one question we always think of, is: "Why do you write? What do you want to write about? What do you have to say to the world?"
Well, Tabata just wanted to draw cool magic battles. That's it. That literally is all there is about it.