An American Writer's Thoughts on Japanese Animation

When I’d Rather be Reading a Card Game Tie-In Novel from the 90’s… – Xuan Yuan Sword Luminary Spoiler Review

A strange title, I know, but I’ll get to it. First, it’s time to take a look at Xuan Yuan Sword Luminary itself. Funnily enough, it’s also based on a game, one out of a massive series of RPGs. But don’t worry if you’ve never heard of the Xuan Yuan Sword series or the particular game this show is “based on”. I hadn’t, and from what I’ve looked up about it after the fact it doesn’t really seem to have much in common with what’s on the screen.

Set in a fantasy world that resembles a mythical version of ancient China, Xuan Yuan Sword Luminary follows a trio of characters who had their village destroyed by the burgeoning Taibai empire. Sisters Yin and Ning escaped, though the younger sister, Ning, lost her arms in the process. Meanwhile, Zhao, a boy that both sisters had a crush on and who had deep feelings for Yin himself, was taken by the Imperial forces to serve as a slave. Zhao assumes he’s the only survivor of his people, and the sisters similarly think they’re alone and that Zhao was killed like the rest. Years later, exceptional circumstances drag the three back together on opposite sides of a major conflict.

Sounds like the recipe for some high drama, doesn’t it? But even the best recipe can fail if the execution is botched, and the execution in Xuan Yuan Sword Luminary is… a problem, to say the least.

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Seasonal Selection – Deca-dence Episode 6

Previously, we saw Kaburagi zapped into unconsciousness, his fate unknown. This week we follow up with Kaburagi as he’s sent to robot Gulag. True, Kamina Shades Manager wanted to simply scrap him outright, but with the suggestion that someone (likely his friend in charge of the Deca-dence fortress itself) pulled strings in his favor, he’s sent off to a “bug correction” camp instead.

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I really wanted to make a Chain pun but I guess there was a missing link – Gleipnir Spoiler Review

Gleipnir, in Norse mythology, is the unbreakable chain that holds the wolf Fenrir, fine as a silken ribbon yet stronger than iron. What does this have to do with an anime about a boy who turns into a super-powered mascot suit and an assortment of other weirdos who got bizarre and sometimes creepy transformation powers from an alien living in a vending machine? I’ll be honest, while I could probably make up an answer, I haven’t a clue as to what the real one is. And that, I think, helps illuminate both the strengths and weaknesses of the show, a topic I’ll come back to at the end

The first thing you might come to know about Gleipnir is that it is, according to some, fairly derivative of Mirai Nikki. At least, that’s something that I heard from a lot of sources including friends and other reviewers, and briefly thought myself in the first two episodes. Usually, it wasn’t in the most flattering terms. But, having made it through the whole thing, I find myself disagreeing, at least about Gleipnir being truly derivative, or a knock-off. I certainly understand how someone could come to that conclusion: there are points on which Gleipnir seems to want the comparison, down to its opening recreating, with its leading lady, Clair, the famous image of Yuno Gasai on the rooftop in red and shadow that’s found in the first opening of Mirai Nikki. But, on the whole, I think that while some comparison between the two is important, Gleipnir is more different than it is something living in a predecessor’s shadow. Delving into that comparison seems as good a place as any to start with the show.

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Seasonal Selection – Deca-dence Episode 5

“The world needs bugs.”

This episode is mostly concerned with the resolve of the situation that the previous episode established, which takes about the right amount of time. As various teams deal with the small fry on the mountain, the sacrificial teams challenge the fog-spewing Gadoll alpha, which is supposed to be unbeatable. Natsume has to face it down for her life and the lives of her squad, but of something manages to kill it, the game’s storyline will be thrown into disarray.

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Seasonal Selection – Deca-dence Episode 4

Our episode starts in a way that’s to formula, much like the last episode, but also much like the last episode, effective. Natsume enters live combat for the first time, and despite not being the best of the best just yet, she manages to hold on and put on a good show, dispatching Gadoll in her search for Pipe. During the fight, she catches the attention of her hero, Kurenai, the strongest fighting Tanker, and makes a good impression.

Aside from Kurenai seeming to have a long-time crush on Kaburagi, she also provides Natsume an introduction to The Power, letting her join the fight on an official basis. Everything seems about on track: at this point, we should have a series of minor battles, possibly in montage form, allowing Natsume to rise in rank and esteem before socking her with the next major turn; possibly the System finding out she’s a bug (she’s fairly free with the term after Kaburagi dropped it), perhaps something else, right? Wrong.

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And Now I’m Hungry – Restaurant to Another World Spoiler Review

This is a strange one to review. Restaurant to Another World is a show about an eatery that, on Saturdays, opens its door onto a fantasy world. In the fantasy world, mysterious free-standing doors that lead to the place’s interior appear, leading strange individuals from all over the fantasy world to stop in and have a bite to eat.

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Seasonal Selection – Deca-dence Episode 3

Last time on Deca-dence we changed our entire outlook on the state of the world. This time, we have a much more standard episode, but one that was also very needed for what’s ahead.

Specifically, this episode is mostly dedicated to a training montage. Natsume is learning how to fight the Gadoll from zero, or arguably less than zero, so spending time with Kaburagi in the “tutorial zone” grinding on the weak ones until she gets the hang of riding gravity waves, moving gracefully in the bubble fields, and killing her foes efficiently and effectively.

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A Show That Exists? – Granblue Fantasy (Season 1) Spoiler Review

A curious thing happened as I sat down to write my review for this week. I knew there was a show I’d intended to review, but for the life of me I could not remember what it was. I knew I had to have made note of it somewhere and so I looked, and I saw… Granblue Fantasy?

Granblue Fantasy?

Ah, right! Granblue Fantasy. I certainly saw a show by that name. It had characters, and a plot, that much was certain. And, um…

Okay, I’ll cut the comedy routine here. The point is that I didn’t find Granblue Fantasy particularly distinctive or memorable. In many ways it’s actually remarkable how standard it really is, so much so that I could quite easily refer to the characters and moments by the archetypes they evoke or the better characters from other media whose notes they’ve seemingly copied. Yet, at the same time, can I really consider it to be that bad, or worth scorn? Is it like Hundred where the laziness is insulting and noxious, or is it more like Yuuna and the Haunted Hot Springs, where being a largely unremarkable expression of a genre is just that, unremarkable?

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Seasonal Selection – Deca-dence Episode 2

So, Deca-dence went and explained most of the mysteries from last episode by going and catapulting itself into a whole new genre of weird. Because, it turns out, the world that Natsume knows is only one (part of?) the world. Her boss, Kaburagi, is part of the other side.

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