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Vous pouvez trouvez des animes entier en version originale ou avec des sous-titres en Anglais. Malheureusement Kissanime n’offre pas de contenu en Français et c’est pour cette raison qu’il n’est pas assez populaire dans les pays francophone. Vous pouvez vous inscrire mais c’est toujours possible de regarder des animes sans inscription. On aime bien la section « Trending » introuvable dans d’autres sites ça vous permet d’avoir une petite idée sur ce qui se passe dans la communauté des fans. Profitez de ce site car c’est une vrai mine d’or ! 4-Aniwave Aniwave. to Aniwave est un excellent site si vous cherchez une source fiable pour regarder les animes les plus populaires ou les moins connus en streaming.

8% from 3, so why isn't he playing at a much higher level already? This concept is so poorly thought out, and if the writer wanted to force abilities in this badly, they should've made them less overpowered and more subtle, so it would at least be fair. The players and coaches seem to be self-aware of these abilities, yet they aren't at the same time. They are never implemented into the game plan at all. The abilities are often inconsistent, to the point where even the author doesn't know how they work. There is no consistency or use of strategy integrated within the abilities that add to the sport. You would think that, at least with the power system, the author would include this as a strategic way of playing through the basketball game, but even with these powers, there is still no strategy involved, and it is just random dunks with barely any planning or teamwork.
The author was attempting to mix normal basketball play with overpowered abilities, but this creates an infinite number of problems such as: If Midorima can shoot 100% from anywhere on the court (even full-court shots somehow, which is physically impossible), why don't they just set screens or create ball movement in order to get him more open? Why doesn't Kise just copy whatever ability he needs at any moment in time whenever he needs that exact ability? Why does Kuroko go unnoticed still even though people know that his quirk is going unnoticed? Why does Kagami's ability defy the laws of physics? Why is Aomine so overpowered to the point where he can seemingly do anything he wants? The author was attempting to still have the characters play normal basketball even with these broken abilities, but the author didn't realize just how much these abilities change the core function of how the sport is played. Instead of going all the way and changing it fully, he mixes it with traditional basketball, and he uses the abilities as a cheap way to let us know who the important characters are instead of being able to come up with actual crafty basketball skills that normal people have in real life.
Even the Coach has a random inhuman ability for no reason, which normally serves as plot convenience to use it as an excuse for her to know when Kagami should play or not whenever he gets injured. Instead of having a medical team like in real life and having to make a life-altering decision such as deciding whether to risk it all and play for the current time and risk making your injury career-ending or to suck it up and let it heal by ending the current season. Instead of being faced with tough decisions, the coach just magically knows exactly what Kagami's health status is and if he should continue playing or not.

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These are defined as: Akina's Eight-Six Arc (Chapter 001 - Chapter 191, Volume 01 - mid Volume 17, First Stage - Third Stage) White Ghost of Akina Arc (Chapter 001 - Chapter 077, Volume 01 - early Volume 08, First Stage - Act 1 - First Stage - Act 26) Emperor Arc (Chapter 078 - Chapter 117, early Volume 08 - mid Volume 11, Second Stage - Act 1 - Second Stage - Act 8) The New Eight-Six Arc (Chapter 118 - Chapter 191, mid Volume 11 - mid Volume 17, Second Stage - Act 8 - end of Third Stage) Project D Arc (Chapter 192 - Chapter 719, mid Volume 17 - Volume 48, Fourth Stage - Final Stage) Tochigi Arc (Chapter 192 - Chapter 264, mid Volume 17 - mid Volume 22, Fourth Stage - Act 1 - Fourth Stage - Act 7) Saitama and Ibaraki Arc (Chapter 265 - Chapter 443, mid Volume 22 - early Volume 33, Fourth Stage - Act 7 - Fifth Stage - Act 1) The Kanagawa Expedition Arc (Chapter 444 - Chapter 719, early Volume 33 - Volume 48, Fifth Stage - Act 1 - Final Stage - Act 4) Synopsis[] This section is missing essential information. You can help the Initial D Wiki by expanding it.
Set in the late 1990s in Japan's Gunma Prefecture, the series follows the adventures of Takumi Fujiwara, an eighteen year old who helps his father run a tofu store by making deliveries every morning to a hotel on Akina with his father's Toyota Sprinter Trueno GT-APEX (AE86). It is revealed that Takumi has been driving on Mt. Akina every morning to deliver Tofu to the summit five years before he even had his license. As a result his skills in mountain racing were honed, and is able to drive under adverse weather conditions. Akina's Eight-Six[] The White Ghost of Akina[] The story begins when street racers called the Akagi RedSuns, a team from Mt. Akagi, come to challenge Mt. Akina's local team, the Akina SpeedStars, to a "friendly" race. After seeing how skilled the RedSuns are, the SpeedStars treat it as a race for pride, determined not to be humiliated on their home turf. However, the SpeedStars are left in a bind when their team leader and primary downhill driver Iketani has an accident during a practice run.
Unlike both the manga and Brotherhood, the original anime adaptation of Full Metal Alchemist featured some surprising and unique characters, not the least of which is Edward Elric himself.
But before we get into that though, let's talk Homunculi.
One of the most overlooked aspects of the original series was the nomenclature given to the homunculi, and although their names and purpose have been "clarified" by the manga and Brotherhood, the writers for the original adaptation didn't have this knowledge, so they actually made them work in a completely different way. The whole deal with the Seven Sins is very different in the first anime, as the writers used the homunculus to highlight the aspect of obsession throughout the series. This is why the first anime adaptation had them being "born" in a particular manner, rather than the more trite reasoning given in the manga and Brotherhood much later.
The homunculi are effectively born from the obsession of humans, a theme which is also present in Arakawa's version of the story, even though it has been downplayed a lot.
So what does this have to do with the characters? Well, rather a lot actually. Throughout the whole series, there are very few characters who don't show any of the visible signs that one would normally associate with obsessive behaviour, and this is because they're cleverly hidden for the most part. From Maes Hughes' constant babble about his daughter, to Winry's love of automail. From Izumi Curtis' longing for her baby, to Dante's desire for immortality (incidentally, one has to wonder why that particular character was called Dante).
And right at the top of the list is Edward Elric.
,Ltd. ©2024 All Rights Reserved. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Attack on Titan (TV series) - Wikipedia Jump to content Main menu Main menu move to sidebar hide Navigation Main pageContentsCurrent eventsRandom articleAbout WikipediaContact usDonate Contribute HelpLearn to editCommunity portalRecent changesUpload file Search Search Create account Log in Personal tools Create account Log in Pages for logged out editors learn more ContributionsTalk Contents move to sidebar hide (Top) 1Series overview Toggle Series overview subsection 1. 1Season 1 1. 2Season 2 1.