Need Rei to perform perfect tea ceremony as well.Sounds like somebody wants a harem, one to read to you, the other to play music.
Need Rei to perform perfect tea ceremony as well.Sounds like somebody wants a harem, one to read to you, the other to play music.
You know I think I'd like a harem in a story if said harem was more like real world ones aka a lethal nest of vipers.Sounds like somebody wants a harem, one to read to you, the other to play music.
It basically pioneered the magical girl genre
So, the start of any female-centered Chinese palace drama? When the gender is flipped and the man is the focus none of that drama ever gets mentioned, which... is pretty true to history I guess.You know I think I'd like a harem in a story if said harem was more like real world ones aka a lethal nest of vipers.
Perhaps "popularized" would have been a better word to use.That's gonna be a nope on SM pioneering the genre.
Perhaps "popularized" would have been a better word to use.
It was basically their equivalent to superhero shit.Yeah, that would be correct. The combination of super sentai and magical girl really grabbed Japan hard.
Except that they don't relaunch/recycle stuff as much as Marvel/DC do, there is more variety.It was basically their equivalent to superhero shit.
they have possessed tank with infinite ammo.I count it as superpower.Those Who Hunt Elves is an interesting take. The three isekai'd characters are dropped into a swords-and-sorcery(ish) fantasy world without gaining any superpowers. They want to go home and the locals want to be rid of them.
It runs on "rule of funny".
The thank is posessed by a cat spirit. It's an otherwise normal Mitsubishi Type 74.they have possessed tank with infinite ammo.I count it as superpower.
And,considering that they always must undress some pretty elven lady,I think that it run on "rule of hentaji"
Infinite ammo and fuel still count as superpower.And cat spirit,too.The thank is posessed by a cat spirit. It's an otherwise normal Mitsubishi Type 74.
Plus, you'd think "rule of hentai" from the premise, but no, it's "rule of funny". There's so little nudity and fanservice on display that the show is rated PG in the US ... for violence.
Oh the Japanese definitely have their own annoying cliches that show up in everything.Except that they don't relaunch/recycle stuff as much as Marvel/DC do, there is more variety.
Yeah.Oh the Japanese definitely have their own annoying cliches that show up in everything.
Bleach isn't that bad especially if you skip all the shitty fillerYeah.
And shit like FT/Naruto/Bleach that go on for over 9000 episodes.
Dunno, for me it was a gateway animu, and I saw bits of it maybe a decade ago.Bleach isn't that bad especially if you skip all the shitty filler
Personally, I don't intend on ever giving the show a chance to impress me. The whole thing just reeks of daytime soap opera drama, which I have no interest in whatsoever, and the "isekai" reincarnation angle is just a setup gimmick that doesn't amount to anything from what I've heard from readers manga; who also said that the story completely falls apart after the first few arcs anyways, with Ai herself being pretty much the only thing that's noteworthy about it (which is kind of a problem, considering what happens in the prologue).Anyways, on the topic of newer anime, anyone seen Oshi no Ko?
That thing is great, it is like a mix of some of the better crime anime, isekai and idol stuff, all rolled into one.
I saw a few episodes today, I was not sold when I first read the summary, but it turned out excellent.
Suit yourself.Personally, I don't intend on ever giving the show a chance to impress me. The whole thing just reeks of daytime soap opera drama, which I have no interest in whatsoever, and the "isekai" reincarnation angle is just a setup gimmick that doesn't amount to anything from what I've heard from readers manga; who also said that the story completely falls apart after the first few arcs anyways, with Ai herself being pretty much the only thing that's noteworthy about it (which is kind of a problem, considering what happens in the prologue).