kamisama hajimemashita finale
[3] He also claims
mystery is the central theme of the manga, as he was fascinated by it as a child. Furthermore, Araki wanted to explore superpowers and energy in JoJo's Bizarre Adventure resulting in various concepts such as Hamon and Stands. [3] He said that the supernatural basis of the fights in his series evened the battlefield for women and children to match up against strong men. [6] For Stardust Crusaders in particular, Araki was influenced by role-playing games in designing the characters' skills. [3] In creating the manga's generational story, Araki thought much about death and the legacy people leave behind in their lives for their descendants, after the death of his grandfather. He took inspiration from Roots: The Saga of an
American Family and East of Eden. Araki focused on Roots for its family-centric story,[7] and he took the idea of intertwined destiny and rivalry between two families from East of Eden. He thought highly of stories that were well-received after changing protagonists, which influenced Araki's decision to kill Jonathan Joestar and write a generational story, passing on his "Spirit" to his own descendants. [8] The characters had no models, except Jotaro Kujo, who was based on Clint Eastwood. Araki stated that he wanted to try a different type of main character for every part; for example, Part 1's Jonathan Joestar was a serious and honest person, whereas Part 2's Joseph Joestar was a trickster. [9] Although their personalities are different, the two share a physical resemblance in order to have some continuity because it was unheard of in the 1980s for a main character to die in a Weekly Shōnen Jump series.
In KNB, I'm not super
amazed at how Kagami, Kuroko, or any other character for that matter can use these super moves in their official games, when I didn't see the process of how they arrived at that result. A key factor in sports animes is the process of their transformation. KNB had terrible pacing that those crucial
training scenes were as good as nonexistent. Don't get me started on the KNB Last Game movie, that movie had terrible pacing. Like we get moment of them "training", declare war against Jabberwocks, then get straight to the match. Like what? They had 1 hr and 50+ mins to show us their training because Jabberwocks even rivaled NBA players, but no, because their the Generation of Miracles, they'll make the dream work.
If any of this sounds appealing to you, I suggest you check out Frieren. I personally see the series as a fantastic representation of what a true higher-level fantasy
anime should really be like. However, I do recognize
that for some, it simply doesn’t have that traditional anime impact that you need to enjoy a series. That’s perfectly okay, but just know you're probably missing out on something truly great.
Thanks for reading, let's have more Frieren-like fantasy and less vending machine isekai. Reviewer’s Rating: 9 What did you think of this review? Nice 0 Love it 0 Funny 0 Confusing 0 Informative 0 Well-written 0 Creative 0More reviews by TheRealist68 (15) Show allRead moreShow lessOpen Gift Report Jan 26, 2024 Shyra_ Not Recommended FunnyPreliminary (3/28 eps) Frieren is the most overrated anime of this decade, and I'm going to show you why.
It's an empty anime with no story to tell, a repetitive series that dwells on the same subject in every episode: the past.
The characters are not at all interesting; they're all one-dimensional and poorly written. Frieren is a bland elf who doesn't grasp human emotions. That blue-haired guy (whose name escapes me because everything in this anime is easily forgettable) is a hero, the other group member is an alcoholic priest, and the last member is a dwarf. The group could be entirely different, and it wouldn't affect the plot .