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Archived from the
original on May 7, 2014.
Retrieved May 6, 2014. ^ "「アイシールド21」キャラクターソング Song
Field 3~Max Wind".
CDJournal (in Japanese). Ongaku Shuppansha. Archived from the original on May 7, 2014. Retrieved May 6, 2014. ^ "「アイシールド21」Sound Field Special". CDJournal (in Japanese). Ongaku Shuppansha. Archived from the original on May 7, 2014.
I think that this work
also asks the question of how people should deal with and treat those talents. "[4] Many of the stories in Oshi no Ko are based on pieces of real-life events. [4] Akasaka stated that he considered his fundamental writing style to be that of Oshi no Ko and that the comedy in Kaguya-sama originated as a request from the editorial department. However, he included similar humor in Oshi no Ko to make it easier to read. [4] When writing, Akasaka sometimes became fond of certain characters and gave them larger roles in the plot, like in Mem-cho's case. [5] Art[edit] When Akasaka came up with the concept for Oshi no Ko, he immediately contacted artist Mengo Yokoyari as Yokoyari had dealt with the entertainment industry in her one-shot Kawaii before. The two had long been acquaintanced but had never worked together. When designing characters, Akasaka usually sends a rough sketch to the person in charge of the storyboards. He sometimes allowed Yokoyari to draw the designs as she pleased. The only time they changed a character design was when one of the characters looked too much like the real-life person they were modeled after. [4][6] Media[edit] Manga[edit] Main article:
List of Oshi no Ko chapters Oshi no Ko, written by Aka Akasaka and illustrated by Mengo Yokoyari, started in Shueisha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump on April 23, 2020.
These degenerate themes and farcical
friendships reach their meager peak during the end of the first arc. After God Yuichi lays out the oh-so ingenious manner in which he enacted his master plan to oust Glasses Tenji as the traitor, Glasses Tenji calls him out, saying he couldn’t have possibly been sure of his conclusion with the logic he presented, and God Yuichi concedes. “Indeed,” he says, “but the real Tomodachi Game was the friends we made along the way, old buddy. I
knew you were the traitor simply because we’re friends, and I knew something was off as soon as the game began. ” In any well-written anime, this would’ve been a really powerful and emotional moment that could’ve convincingly and empathetically offered Glasses Tenji an off-ramp to redemption and reintegration into the friend group, but in this show, it just makes you roll your fucking eyes, because the whole problem with it in the first place is that these peoples’ “friendship” doesn’t exist. The show tells us they’re friends, but we never got to actually see them being friends.