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Miyamura's most significant obstacle was his inability to say how he truly felt. Characters joke about it because they reference how stereotypical his behavior is. If your story makes fun of a genre cliche,
then repeatedly uses it, you are not
subverting anything. The story is aware it is annoying and it does not care.
Miyamura is a respectful guy; he's not possessive of Hori. He does everything she asks, and then some. When his friend Toru asked him for permission to date Hori, he said 'it's her choice' because he's a decent person. Most importantly, he had plausible reasons for falling in love with her. His first reason was, "She doesn't judge people based on looks. " She embraced him even though society frowns up students with long hair, piercings, and tattoos. In reality, kids would be lining up to be friends with someone like him—but we need anime high school drama logic! So let's say being Cool makes him Uncool.
The significance of King of Fighters '94 to the company's eventual
bottom line and reputation is immeasurable. It didn't take long for Capcom to take notice of the teamplay mechanic pioneered in King of Fighters '94. By 1996, the rival company had paired up its X-Men license with the Street Fighter franchise to make X-Men vs. Street Fighter. Marvel vs. Capcom and Marvel vs. Capcom 2 followed a few years later. Eventually, SNK and Capcom would put aside their differences and join forces to create another team fighting franchise: Capcom vs. SNK.
Some of SNK's ads during the mid-'90s were pretty low-rent. Case in point: This goofy-looking KOF '94 ad.
appreciate the most in media, which is “show, don’t tell”. This
anime masterfully handles that by giving us virtually no real direction on the surface, but encourages the
viewer to ponder on the events of each episode, pay attention to how the characters act, and recall past events to make a scene or reveal hit that much harder. It’s an anime that can generate a lot of discourse because it is just so mind-bending at times, and confusing, in the most wonderful of ways. It’s not exactly “unpredictable” either, but in order to get the full picture, some thinking must be done — I really appreciate that, as it makes for another level of engagement to the events of the anime. In many media, it’s the author who seems to be the one dumping the information, but in this show, it’s instead the viewers who might try to put two and two together, like a puzzle, to figure out what exactly is going on in the story. There’s no better feeling than when you put two and two together and find out your theory was indeed correct.