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Albedo is granted permission to visit Re-Estize. As Pandora’s Actor still has an annoying personality Ainz suggests he would be proud if he grew beyond his original programming, though he asks this be kept secret in case the Floor Guardians think he is showing favouritism. Pandora’s Actor reveals that while posing as Momon many humans have been asking him about Ainz. Ainz worries the Floor Guardians still see humans as lesser creatures. Ainz approaches Ainzach, Master of the local adventurer’s guild. Since Ainz’s Death Knights keep the peace a lot of the adventurers security work has dried up, so Ainz asks to absorb the guild into his kingdom and put the adventurers to work exploring unknown lands and establishing diplomatic ties with undiscovered kingdoms.

The singers were in Sailor Fuku too. MAD has a segment called "Grey's in Anime". In "Batman's Strangest Cases", an episode of Batman: The Brave and the Bold, one segment is an Affectionate Parody of the '60s Batman manga by Jiro Kuwata. The sequence is in sepia tones, has extremely limited animation and out-of-synch "English dubbing", and is a gentle jab at '60s anime like Gigantor. The Simpsons: From "In Marge, We Trust", Miisutaa Supakaaru (Mr. Sparkle), the Japanese Homer Simpson. He's actually an amalgamation of two Japanese companies whose logos are a fish and a lightbulb, respectively. In "Thirty Minutes over Tokyo", there is a Japanese program called "Battling Seizure Robots", which parodies the infamous episode of Pokémon: The Original Series which caused seizures in nearly 700 people. In "HOMR", the family goes to an animation convention, and Bart and Lisa watch a parody of Fist of the North Star and Battle of the Planets. In "Bart vs. Lisa vs.

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98 20200405 Gleipnir TV, 2020Finished 13 eps, 23 min Action Mystery Supernatural Ecchi Gleipnir Shuuichi Kagaya is what one would consider an average high school student, but sometimes, he turns into a monster. He doesn't know how or why he got his abilities, only that he would prefer no one knows about them. One night, he finds a building ablaze with a girl trapped inside. Deciding to save her, he transforms and carries her to safety, but accidentally drops his phone. The next day, the girl he saved—Claire Aoki—finds him and confronts him about his monster identity. She even goes so far as to push him off the school roof to prove her theory after Shuuichi denies her allegations. Desperate to save himself, he transforms, and Claire snaps a picture in order to blackmail him into telling her everything he knows about monsters, which, ironically, isn't much. As it turns out, Claire has a secret of her own: she has been searching for her sister, who also became a monster. She enlists Shuuichi's help to track her down, but they aren't the only ones searching for answers. [Written by MAL Rewrite] StudioPINE JAM SourceManga DemographicSeinen 6. 98 485K Add to My List Chobits 481363 7. However, Aya gives him a reason to delay his demise, so he kisses her in a makeshift contract. 2"Vampire"
Transliteration: "Kyūketsuki" (Japanese: 吸血鬼)Yayoi TanakaNoboru TakagiMamoru HatakeyamaJuly 13, 2023 (2023-07-13)[b] In 1898, a mansion in Le Givre is home to a family of vampires who are trying to make peace with humans sometime after Count Dracula's death. However, Lord Godard comes home to find his wife, Hannah, murdered. Feeling resentful of the police's efforts to find the culprit, Godard decides to hire "The Cage User," a private detective who has recently built a reputation for solving supernatural cases around Europe. The Cage User turns out to be Tsugaru, though he admits he is more of an apprentice to the real detective that is Aya's head. After surveying the crime scene, Aya asks several questions: how did the murderer know where to find a silver stake and break the lock to the storeroom, know exactly where the victim would be, to kill her without a struggle, and yet be sloppy enough to leave evidence of a bottle of holy water behind? As Aya and Godard ponder these questions, a mysterious hunter approaches from the woods outside.
AdvertisementPrevious SlideNext Slide2 / 14List slidesOdd TaxiList slidesOdd Taxi AdvertisementEver wonder about how many odd folks a city taxi driver must deal with daily? Do you then reflexively ponder whether you yourself are the aforementioned odd customer? Odd Taxi pushes the pedal to the floor with that premise, with the taxi driver and his patrons being eccentric anthropomorphic animals. First announced during the 2021 Crunchyroll awards, Odd Taxi follows an introverted 41-year-old taxi driving walrus named Hiroshi Odokawa. It begins with Odokawa, forced into mild-mannered conversations with his customers who range from being aspiring pop idols, wannabe influencers, and down-on-their-luck comedians. But the seemingly disparate lives of Odokawa’s patrons start to weave together as news breaks of a missing high schooler who just so happened to be one of his customers. Odokawa finds himself in the middle of a police investigation while under the eye of the yakuza, who have a personal stake in the missing high schooler’s safety. But the less I reveal about the anime’s plot the better.