An American Writer's Thoughts on Japanese Animation

How about a nice game of Wixoss? – Selector Spoiler Review

So, Selector, what even is it? Depending on who you ask it’s either one show with two seasons, or a one season show, Selector Infected with a one season sequel, Selector Spread. Either way it’s also, if you believe it, a card game tie-in anime; it released concurrently with the card game WIXOSS, making the game in the show more or less real, similar to what was done a decade and a half earlier with Yugioh. While WIXOSS never achieved the international success of its predecessor (perhaps because its first western release is scheduled for this November, several years and formats after Selector), it’s very much an actual game and is still going strong.

Especially in the West, game tie-ins are seen sort of as poison when it comes to cinema or shows, what with the stigma around video game movies and the inability of Magic: the Gathering to launch any sort of film endeavor despite over two decades of popularity and several surprisingly good novels and fun comics (and plenty of trash ones too). Even anime isn’t immune. I can’t deny that when a show’s derived from a game, it’s generally working uphill, and that’s with video games that have stories to provide. Some are hits while others… aren’t. The closest famed thing to what WIXOSS was attempting with Selector would, of course, be the Yugioh anime, but while it’s extremely successful and certainly a beloved show I’ve always gotten the impression that it’s loved more for cheesy fun than held up as actual quality storytelling.

Despite this, I was told up and down that Selector was different. It was good on its own. Selector Infected WIXOSS, that’s the tabletop game tie-in that really works as an anime. Well, curiosity got the better of me at last, so it’s time to look at Selector.

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Chuuni Dreams – When Supernatural Battles Became Commonplace Spoiler Review

You’ve seen the story before: All of a sudden, some high school students gain fabulous secret powers, giving them radically more agency. Really, this can be anything, from mechas to magical girls. It doesn’t matter – the point is that you have this setup where people who at least know each other and possibly are somewhat close are thrust into a new and more wonderful adventure.

What if they weren’t?

Thrust into an adventure, that is. What if a bunch of teenagers gained supernatural abilities but no world-threatening evil or really anything else to do with those abilities actually appeared, and the group had to just go about their lives, now with powers? As you might have guessed, you’d get When Supernatural Battles Became Commonplace.

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Candidate for the Plot – Pilot Candidate Spoiler Review

“Here we go again.” That’s honestly what I thought when loading up the first episode of Pilot Candidate.  Mechas versus space monsters, protecting what’s left of humanity from certain annihilation, some weird imagery and the expectation of, probably, bland characters and a lackluster story.  There are probably a million shows like that, but, I thought, I can only address one coprolite at a time so here we are.  What I found was… well, it was at least a little more interesting than that, so let’s take a look.

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District Nope – DearS Spoiler Review

Think, for a moment, about the concept of Aliens visiting Earth. How is this handled? Well, usually the aliens are depicted as being in at least some ways superior to mankind. After all, they’ve mastered some technique of interstellar travel and we have not. Whether they’re more or less friendly or decidedly hostile, it’s easy to see them negotiating from a position of power.

Some years back, though, there was a film called District 9 that depicts a very different scenario. There, the aliens are shellshocked refugees that largely don’t understand and can’t repair or reproduce the advanced technology that brought them to earth. To make matters worse, they stopped in apartheid South Africa, becoming the subject of all the social stresses of that nation. It’s not pretty, but it’s a very good film that uses a typical tool, the space alien, in a fairly novel way.

Five years before District 9, though, (7 years if you want to count the first release of the manga, rather than the show) there was an anime with a similar take. DearS has a pitch and setup that’s very familiar to District 9: Aliens arrive, but for neither invasion nor uplift as, in fact, they’re stuck with the fact that their space ship has broken down and seemingly can’t be fixed. Some time after first contact, we follow an initially anti-alien fellow as he gets to know one of them and ultimately empathize with the plight of the alien in question, all while some larger conspiracy might be in play. There are, of course, some differences based on the genre and target demographic – in DearS we’re dealing with a high school student and a cute girl in a fairly functional modern Japan, not an office worker and an a creature described as a “Prawn” in the dark underbelly of Africa.

Does DearS manage to do its concepts justice and, like District 9 or not, bring us something of intelligence and value with a rare treatment of aliens, or is there a reason why it’s been largely forgotten?

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Seasonal Selection – Scarlet Nexus Episode 1

I love JRPGs.

I know as someone who is at least a bit of a gamer that I shouldn’t utter that sentence, but I do. I like it when I get a game that has a fantastical world wrapped up in a sweeping story that carries you onward, held together with freaky random encounters, eons of side quests, and probably duct tape in there somewhere. So, this season we’re taking on an anime that is literally a JRPG, Scarlet Nexus.

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