It is a solo this week with Rick out and a short one on top of it. Jack starts off with a focus on how different versions change the experience if you watch the English or Japanese versions. He breaks down the name swaps between Japanese and international releases, and he also points out major edits like censorship cuts and trimmed scenes, and compares how soundtrack and dialogue changes can completely shift the tone depending on which cut you watch. He also talks about how the movie feels more like a fan focused showcase where lots of characters pop in briefly, why the game style fight moments are the most fun part, and how the whole thing hit him as a nostalgic easy watch that made him want to pick up Street Fighter II again.
About the anime:
This movie straight up takes the Street Fighter II roster and builds a globe-hopping action story around them. Vega ( or M. Bison for the dub fans) is running Shadaloo (or Shadowlaw) and basically hunting down the world’s strongest fighters so he can control or recruit them to help him with is goals, and Ryu sitting at the center of the target because of his pure raw potential. While Ryu’s out doing his lone-wolf “I’m just here to get stronger” thing, Chun-Li and Guile are pushing the investigation and military side of the plot, trying to shut Shadaloo down before Vega can do any more damage. The movie’s big focus is pretty straight forward, the fight scenes are well executed even if some of them pay homage to the game itself in a fun way and that “that character gets a moment” energy, more than deep mystery plotting.
Next Week's Pick: “A Ninja and an Assassin Under One Roof”
Have you had the chance to watch Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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This week we talked about Lady Death and this for us was more along the lines of a “How did this get made?”. A majority of the time we are trying to figure out what it was we actually watched. Jack brings a dramatic and jokingly unhinged “horn daddy” recap to start things off and Rick follows up with a “biggest daddy issues movie” energy, and we both get into how the pacing feels slow, the story feels thin, and the rules of the world make no sense even when you try to be generous with what you are given. There were a lot of plot gaps and time skips not to mention the poor power scaling that we were subjected too. And to top it all off the dialog and character designs were basically primarily fanservice with a metal-album aesthetic. We also touch on ADV being the studio for this and they have a track record for some shotty productions already so it was not out of the realm of possibility to be like this. If you want messy and inconsistent rules and poor power structure and a feeling like the lurches from Earth to hell to rebellion to final showdown with no repercussions or payoff then this is for you if you are looking for something that is even half way decent then this is not for you.
About the anime:
Lady Death takes us through the story of Hope, a young woman living in 15th-century Sweden whose life gets flipped turned upside down when her daddy was up to no good and started making trouble in her neighborhood and that is when it all falls apart when said daddy aka Matthias, who is a feared mercenary with a very hidden devilish horny side, draws the attention of the Church and the villagers much like Frankenstein did. Hope who stands accused of consorting, among other things, with the Devil gets condemned to burn, Hope then is dragged into a literal deal in Hell and gets “reborn” as Lady Death, a warrior with the desire to kill her horn daddy and lord of lies lucifer. Most of the movie relies on that transformation where we see her struggle with what she’s lost, then train under the hulking hell-blacksmith Cremator, and move through a demon-ruled landscape as she gathers allies like her demonic horny steed Vassago and the Nameless Wolves. The whole thing really leans hard into metal-album visuals, that “bad girl” ’90s comic energy with vendedata for revenge.
Next Week's Pick: “Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie”
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This week talk about Her Blue Sky. We started clearing up some misconceptions that Rick had “13 years ago vs. 13-year-old” confusion and then we dove into the misconceptions about the guitar and why it was still weirdly brand new. From there, we talked about the main hook, the younger and older versions of Shinnosuke existing as separate people, with the younger one absolutely tearing into his older self later in the story, which led us into talking about growing up, losing your spark, and how life can jade you without fully killing the dream you started with. We also talked about the “eyeball star” birthmark idea, what it’s supposed to mean, and why it initially threw us off and finally rounding it off with us swinging back to the music. One of us expected it to be way better, the other expected total garbage and was surprised it was handled tastefully. Overall, we did agree that it’s a straightforward, linear story that avoids the “wait, what is happening?” problem, dodges the awkward story directions it could’ve taken, and lands on a message that hit us. Say what you need to say, don’t let “good reasons” turn into lifelong regret, and recognize the quiet sacrifices people make.
About the anime:
Her Blue Sky follows Aoi, a high school bassist living in a quiet mountain town, who is itching to head to Tokyo and chase music, lives with her older sister Akane who once gave up her own dream of moving to Tokyo with her boyfriend Shinnosuke after their parents died so she could raise Aoi, and is focused on a life that was built on sacrifice and what-ifs but never regretting it or forsaking. But then everything gets shaken up when adult Shinnosuke returns to town for a local music festival and, at the same time, his teenage self suddenly appears before Aoi, like a living spirit from thirteen years ago. Now caught between past and present, the sisters and the two Shinnosukes are forced to confront old regrets, unspoken feelings, and the weight of promises that were never kept, that’s all wrapped in a story about music, growing up, and figuring out how to move forward without forgetting the people who got you there.
Next Week's Pick: “Lady Death”
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This week we talk about “My Oni Girl” and honestly we spend most of this episode just bouncing theories off of each other. We talk about our initial reactions, and unpack some specific visuals that we agreed on but also disagree on, and then we finally venture off into the “rules of the world” debate about who can see what, what repression means in that world, and how the snow gods work in this movie. Which finally leads into some spoiler territory, but we admit the movie has some big plot holes, but it is still an enjoyable movie nonetheless. There was a lot more that we did talk about like the father and everything that was going on with him.
About the anime:
My Oni Girl follows Hiiragi, a painfully shy high school kid who has spent most of his life trying to please everyone so much so that he has basically forgotten how to say what he really wants to say. Till one day his quiet routine gets thrown out the window when he meets Tsumugi, a very brash oni girl who basically becomes an important part of his life all while she is searching for her missing mother in the human world. Due to certain events that have happened, the two of them run away from home and head out on a strange summer road trip along the way they run into a variety of individuals all of whom basically have important life lessons to teach Hiiragi all while dodging the snow gods, and and getting tangled up in plenty of messy human emotions. And while all that is happening, Tsumugi’s blunt honesty and Hiiragi’s bottled up feelings keep clashing, forcing both of them to confront family baggage, what it means to actually be honest with yourself, and whether you are living for everyone else or finally starting to live for you.
Next Week's Pick: “Her Blue Sky”
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We dive into Clevatess, and we are start off by talking about we are blindsided in the opening and that sent us down quite a rabbit hole of misunderstandings about the king, the heroes and whether this was a noble legend quest or a disguised suicide mission. We spend a big chunk of time untangling and trying to figure out the lore together, along with what the king actually knew and why Clevatess wipes out the kingdom, what the four lords of dark beasts are really doing, and how Alicia’s painful immortality and Naruru’s reconstruction with Betty’s body change the way we see power and sacrifice in this world. Along the way we call out moments we totally misread, and Rick talked about rewatching the final episodes till it finally made things click, kinda, and we talk through how the rapid fire twists, dense exposition and all to round it off with us talking about how it has a Ghibli style of visuals. And that is just what all we talked about. All in all this is a show that you should check out yourself.
About the anime:
Starting off like any other fantasy and in a world where humans and magical dark beasts are locked in a neverending war, you are introduced to the main protagonist along with several other heroes. Journeying to fight one of the 4 Lords of Dark Beasts. The catch though is that they are all killed almost immediately by the one they were fighting and that is Clevatess. As a result of Clevatess being attacked he goes and destroys the kingdom that sent the heroes after which he decides to take in and travel with a human royal infant, and to help him take care of the infant he also revives a former hero, thus forming a strange makeshift “family” all so he can decide on what he will do next.
Next Week's Pick: "My Oni Girl"
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This week we talk about Arifureta From Commonplace to World’s Strongest Season 3 and there was a light recap in episode 1 which kinda helped, and we talk about why this season felt especially dense but still pretty clean and focused with no real filler. We get into the labyrinth trials that this season hit us with as well as what the past ones were largely because the season also re-hashed them a little so we ended having to and a little as well, how the emotion flip and cockroach scenes were a smart way to test their bonds, convictions, and finally how they were challenged on their inner darkness. We spend a lot of time on the differences between Hajime’s traumatized, laser focused “I just want to go home” mindset and Kouki’s crumbling “hero” complex and the moral high ground he tries to maintain. We also talk about how Hajime’s party are all solid and seasoned (for obvious reasons) compared to the struggling newcomers, Rick was surprised by Tio’s surprising emotional stability under all the perviness, and the extra layers we get on Yue’s nature and history which has us excited to see if more information will come. But we can’t help but also highlight some of the negatives that we had for this season as well like how we felt things felt like they were rushed in some places and the open ended finale that makes it so that we want a season 4.
About the anime:
Season 3 picks up right where season 2 left off with Hajime and his party on their way to tackle another Great Labyrinth, only to get sidetracked when they stumble on a group of rabbitmen under attack. They figured out that they are members of Shea tribe, and that members of her tribe including her father, have been abducted by soldiers from the Hoelscher Empire. That detour kinda drags Hajime into a messy mix of empire politics dealing with the Heiligh Kingdom trying to gain assistance and the Haulia clan planning a straight up revolution. Following the events at the empire Hajime, Yue, Shea, Tio and the rest then dive into the Haltina Great Labyrinth and the final Labyrinth trials. In general this season leans into themes of rebellion, what it really means to be a “hero”, and how far Hajime and his companions are willing to bend their morality to protect their own, and all while setting up the larger plot that ties the labyrinths and the gods together.
Next Week's Pick: "Clevatess"
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This week we dive into “The Ossan Newbie Adventurer Trained to Death by the Most Powerful Party Became Invincible”, and we walk through the basic setup of Rick’s late bloomer adventurer story, and then we get to the full breakdown on what the show did and did not do for us and why it didn’t really work. We talk about the rough animation, character designs, and our frustration with the shallow worldbuilding and paper thin noble family antagonists. We also dig into the party’s shared “wish,” why that idea falls apart the more the show explains it, and how the emotional beats mostly miss the mark except for a fight and the ogre’s backstory. Honestly this anime might still work as a junk food power fantasy, but you are not missing anything if you skip it altogether.
About the anime:The anime follows Rick, a man in his 30s who finally quits his long-time job as a guild clerk to chase his childhood dream of becoming an adventurer. He’s scouted by the legendary S-rank party Orichalcum Fist and spends two brutal years being literally trained to death and brought back over and over, honing his skills far beyond normal human limits. The story picks up as Rick takes the official adventurer exams, clashes with arrogant nobles, tackles dangerous quests, and enters high-profile martial arts tournaments, all while trying to stay humble and low key. The show mixes easygoing comedy with fantasy action and leans into themes of late-blooming potential, found family, and how an earnest, middle-aged guy can quietly overturn a world obsessed with natural talent and youth.
Next Week's Pick: "Arifureta: From Commonplace to World's Strongest Season 3"
Have you had the chance to watch The Ossan Newbie Adventurer Trained To Death By The Most Powerful Party Became Invincible or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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This week we dive into Solo Leveling Season 2. We start off a quick play-by-play, Jin-woo’s Red Gate, Demon Castle grind, rising heat from the Association, Chae Hae-in catching on, and the Jeju Island shadow-army to round it off, then we argue adaptation choices. Rick’s fine with trimming inner monologues and letting visuals carry the pace but Jack pushes back saying that tiny connective scenes like the post-Red Gate interviews, Jinho’s dad’s motives among other things were cut, muddying why guilds chase Jin-woo. We spar over what characters actually “know” in-anime, when Baek clocks Jin-woo’s growth, and how a few 10 to 20 second inserts or stat card bumpers could’ve fixed a lot without bogging things down.
About the anime:Jinwoo steps into the role of the Shadow Monarch while still posing as an E-rank hunter in public. The season follows his push through the Red Gate and the Demon Castle to secure the Elixir, his partnership with Yoo Jinho as they navigate guild requirements, and the growing scrutiny from the Hunters Association as his sudden leaps defy explanation. Cha Hae-In starts to see through the act when he keeps showing up to save raids, pulling him into the S-rank spotlight and making every major guild angle to recruit him. It all builds to the Jeju Island raid, where his shadow army reveals its true scale, new generals are born, and the balance of power in the hunter world tilts hard.
Next Week's Pick: "The Ossan Newbie Adventurer Trained To Death By The Most Powerful Party Became Invincible"
Have you had the chance to watch Solo Leveling Season 2 or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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Anime Anonymous joins us again this time for Arcane Season 2. We argue whether the multiverse pivot actually helps the story, untangling Jinx as a whole, and where Shimmer and Ekko’s rewind fit into that not to mention the mixed feelings that we have on Vi and Jayce and get into a full debate over Ambessa plus a couple of fan-theory rabbit holes like Jinx’s likely escape, Heimerdinger futures the whole “no body = not dead” deal. We also compare S1 pacing to S2’s choppier but more satisfying structure, call out the intro Easter eggs. Plus a whole lot more.
About the anime:
Picking up immediately after Jinx's rocket attack on the Piltover council, Season 2 plunges the twin cities into open war. Jinx's act of terror kills Caitlyn's mother, forging Caitlyn into a hardened, revenge-driven military leader, while Vi, torn between her love for Caitlyn and her desperate hope of saving her sister, joins the Enforcers to try and mitigate the conflict between Piltover and Zaun. As the war escalates, it's revealed that Vi and Jinx's adoptive father, Vander, has been monstrously resurrected as the beast Warwick, forcing a devastating family confrontation. The central conflict ultimately shifts as Viktor's "Glorious Evolution" becomes an existential threat to both cities, forcing an uneasy alliance.
Next Week's Pick: "Solo Leveling Season 2"
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This week we have a special guests guests CJ and Artsy from Anime Anonymous and we kick things off with a small discussion about “what counts as anime,” then we dive into Arcane Season 1 and how it is framed around the undercity vs. topside divide with the main characters Vi and Powder’s break that births Jinx, and how well the show is even if you’ve never played the game. The biggest part is that it was done in a three-episode arc rollout, ruthless cliffhangers, the music that was amazing and the story and character development was amazing for the show we finally hit Hextech vs. Shimmer, talk about the pacing with the flashbacks. And then we finally pick favorites get called: Rick picks Ekko, Jack and CJ pick Jinx, Artsy picks Vi.
About the anime:
Set in the League of Legends universe, Arcane follows sisters Vi and Powder as a class struggle between the undercity of Zaun and the gleaming city of Piltover boils over. Scientific breakthroughs around Hextech collide with crime, politics, and family fractures, pushing Powder toward the chaotic persona of Jinx while Vi fights to hold onto what’s left of their bond.
Next Week's Pick: "Arcane Season 2"
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This week we dive into Tsukimichi: Moonlit Fantasy Season 2 and we spent most of the time talking about the teaching arc like why that first “demo” bout with Shiki was about earning respect and not scaring off the students, whether Makoto’s class were troublemakers or just talented misfits, and how that whole school stretches into bigger geopolitical plot points; we also pulled in manga-only context that patched the anime’s fuzzy bits, like humans getting language as a goddess “gift” so it helped explain why he thought he couldn't speak it. From there we spiral into some of the lore, contract power-scaling, and how those Demiplane critters are basically demon-lord tier. We argued pacing vs. payoff on the academy and merchant-guild threads, questioned the handling of Hibiki’s spirit-beast armor without much on-screen context, and leaned on chats live notes to connect how the classroom stuff sets up the wider moves happening off camera.
About the anime:
Season 2 picks up right where Season 1 left off, with Makoto heading to Rotsgard Academy and then he reluctantly takes a teaching job more so that he can open a store in the city forcing him to juggle that and the Kuzunoha Company while also quietly growing the Demiplane into a functioning society. The goddess’s chosen heroes, Hibiki and Tomoki, also step into the spotlight this season, with their ideals clashing with Makoto’s hands-off approach as campus lessons spill into citywide incidents and merchant/noble scheming. The plot weaves through academy lectures, the Rembrandt family, and rising human-demon tensions, and sprinkled with character growth and fights that are nudging the whole world toward a larger political and spiritual showdown that even the goddess can’t ignore.
Next Week's Pick: "Arcane"
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This week we talk about Tsukimichi: Moonlit Fantasy S1 which was Jeb’s pick. We talk about how Makoto gets pulled to another world, but then instantly gets rejected by a vain goddess for being “ugly”. From there he builds his own life and founds the Kuzunoha company coupled with a hidden demi-plane for demihumans, and contracts with Tomoe and Mio while butting heads with human society mostly on ideology. Jack contrasts manga vs. anime (the “ugly” bit hits both worlds) and floats a theory that Makoto’s magic pressure warps how humans see him; and the two other “pretty” heroes exist mostly as goddess eye-candy. We also touch on several other aspects like archery, his element quirks and the Level-1-forever gag vs. why he won’t fake it.
About the anime:Tsukimichi: Moonlit Fantasy follows Makoto Misumi,a highschool student that gets sent to a fantasy world by the moon god Tsukuyomi due to a contract his parents had, only to be rejected by the resident Goddess of the world he was going to for being “ugly.” As a result he is stripped of the “Hero” title before his adventure even begins. Makoto is forced to carve out his own path, quickly amassing power and allies: the dragon Tomoe and the calamity-spider Mio. He also makes the Kuzunoha Company, builds a hidden demiplane where demi-humans can thrive, and clashes with huyman society and the goddess.
Next Week's Pick: "Tsukimichi: Moonlit Fantasy Season 2"
Have you had the chance to watch Tsukimichi: Moonlit Fantasy Season 1 or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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In this episode we dive into The Unwanted Undead Adventurer. We dig into the world building which was solid in its own right and the fact that they have an in-story researcher helps explain everything naturally, plus the power mix that the MC uses along with the weird biology bits like one drop of blood apparently goes a long way help to tie it all in and explain some of the other mechanics as well. However the early sprint with minimal explanation of the overall time line does hinder it a bit as it does not really give you much in the way of the overall progression. Plus there were a few dangling threads that bugged us luckily there is a Season 2 confirmed.
About the anime:
Rentt is an unlucky veteran adventurer who dies after running into a dragon(?) in the Labyrinth of the Moon’s Reflection which is supposed to be a low level (or easy if you will) dungeon and then revives as a skeleton. He learns that defeating monsters fuels his “existential” evolution, letting him climb undead forms toward his goal of becoming human again or as close to it as possible. With the help of his friend and scholar mage Lorraine, he is able to conceal his identity and starts off as a rookie adventurer again and begins to climb the ranks to his ultimate goal and life long pursuit of being a mithril ranked adventurer.
Next Week's Pick: "Tsukimichi: Moonlit Fantasy"
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This week we talk about Chivalry of a Failed Knight and talked about the vibe of the anime and not so much the plot. One of the main points that we touch on is that the main couple actually communicates. We also talk about the main character Ikki and how he makes his own style because no one would train him, and he has a skill that is basically a burst mode that hits hard and then floors him right after. We even argued about chivalry and finally landed on yes, Ikki also sets boundaries and is willing to help people with no strings attached. One thing though is that the pacing bugged us with what seemed like jumps between episodes or ground work laid out but it also felt like there were whole sections just left out. All in all it was an entertaining show and is worth the watch.
Set in a modern world where a small number of humans possess the ability to manipulate their souls into powerful weapons, these individuals are known as "Blazers." and the main story follows Ikki, the so-called “Worst One” at Hagun Academy due to his low magic. His life gets upended when he encounters Stella Vermillion, an A-Ranked Blazer and a princess, in a compromising situation in their shared dorm room. After some shenanigans the two push each other to grow while training for the Seven Stars Sword Art Festival, a national tournament that crowns the strongest student knight. The show blends tournament arcs, romance, light comedy, school politics, clean fights and a straight-shooting main couple that actually communicates most of the time.
Next Week's Pick: "The Undead Unwanted Adventurer"
Have you had the chance to watch Chivalry of a Failed Knight or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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This week we talk about how Power-Rangers-meets-isekai in The Red Ranger Becomes an Adventurer in Another World, where the MC Togo “dies” but wakes in a fantasy world, we laugh about the stat sheet and how his lists punch and kick separately and some subtle gags and the classic Power Ranger trope where enemies randomly explode on defeat. We note a teased “silver” ranger, bandage/bond visual puns like “adhesion squad” and “bond breakers” with a late-season tone shift that suddenly goes dark.
The Red Ranger Becomes an Adventurer in Another World mashes heroics and isekai comedy. Togo, the red leader of the Kizuna Five, dies(?) during a last stand against his nemesis and wakes up in a fantasy world where magic users can’t make sense of his techy ranger gear. In the new world he keeps doing hero work as Kizuna Red, while he eventually teams up with the headstrong mage Yihdra Arvoln, princess Teltina, and knightly bodyguard Lowji to take on the forces of “evil”.
Next Week's Pick: "Chivalry of a Failed Knight"
Have you had the chance to watch Red Ranger becomes an adventure in another world or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
Check out CJ’s Podcast
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Lycoris Recoil takes place in Tokyo, and follows elite teen agents “Lycoris,” raised by the secret government agency called Direct Attack (DA) whos job is to quietly prevent crime and terrorism. Takina, one of the Main Characters, is given a disciplinary transfer and is forced to be partners with the cheerful prodigy Chisato at front company café LycoReco. This show is a blend of stylish gunfights and cozy café jobs with a dash of found-family vibes while the pair also tries to foil the anarchist Majima and uncover secrets of those close to them.
Another solo-hosted this week for Jack but Rick should be back next time and we dove into Lycoris Recoil as recommended by CJ. We talk through why the show works moment-to-moment from stylish gunfights and cozy café vibes, to the sunshine-gremlin Chisato, rubber bullets, bullet-dodging “reads”, and bouncing off mission-first Takina all while Majima stirs chaos and the Alan Institute teases a bigger conspiracy. And then Jack starts to get hung up about the gaps like judge-jury-executioner teens, “safest city” cover-ups waved away, retirement rules never explained, Alan’s motives barely sketched. It’s got great chemistry, crisp action, and worldbuilding that would be great for a longer run or second season but as a single cour short season it feels thin and rushed. It is a fun, easy watch if you don’t poke the plot. So it is one that you should skip if plot holes drive you nuts.
Next Week's Pick: "Red Ranger becomes an adventure in another world"
Have you had the chance to watch Lycoris Recoil or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
Check out CJ’s Podcast
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See You Tomorrow at the Food Court follows two high school girls, who look like total opposites, meet up everyday after class at the mall food court on their way home to just talk about life while they eat whatever catches their eyes. Wada is seen as a quiet, perfect honor student but in reality she’s actually a gacha game diehard with zero chill when it comes to her favorite SSR. Yamamoto has the look of a flashy gyaru type but in reality she’s thoughtful, grounded, and way more studious than people think. Every episode drops into a handful of mini-stories about whatever chaos Wada brings that day, while Yamamoto keeps her friend tethered.
This week is another solo episode with Jack but Rick did send him some notes and his score. It was also a recommendation from Major Montana. The show in general for Jack was solid and was easy to watch in the sense that it was easy to get through. It was not a heavy show but rather it was something that literally took you in the day in the life of 2 friends who meet up everyday. This is not something that you closely have to watch or pay attention to but it does help as there is a little bit of a narrative for it but it also is not hard to just pick up at any point in time for it. Honestly if you are looking for something that is an easy watch that is not heavy and is a cute show that has some shenanigans in it then this is for you but if you are looking for something deeper with character development then this is not for you.
Next Week's Pick: "Chainsaw Man - The Movie: Reze Arc"
Have you had the chance to watch See You Tomorrow at the Food Court or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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Love Flops follows Asahi, an average high school kid whose day goes sideways after a morning fortune-telling segment from an AI program, and it all starts coming true one prediction at a time and for each one that comes true he crashes into a different girls from around the world and somehow ends up rooming with them. It plays like how you would expect from any harem comedy at first, then it pivots into a sci-fi twist about simulated reality and grief when you learn why these “perfect encounters” keep happening. The show leans into fanservice at the start, but then it starts to ask some heavier questions near the end about escapism and moving forward.
We jumped into Love Flops at the recommendation of Jeb and at first we thought it was going to just be a standard harem show with some comedy which was true for the first half of the series but then it takes a hard pivot to VR Escapism because of grief coupled with AI trying to “learn love.” We talked about the intentional time leaps as well as how time passed vs how it appeared to have passed, and how each girl basically feels like they used a different “training dataset” for what love might look like.
Next Week's Pick: "Angel Beats"
Have you had the chance to watch Love Flops or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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We jumped into Love Flops at the recommendation of Jeb and at first we thought it was going to just be a standard harem show with some comedy which was true for the first half of the series but then it takes a hard pivot to VR Escapism because of grief coupled with AI trying to “learn love.” We talked about the intentional time leaps as well as how time passed vs how it appeared to have passed, and how each girl basically feels like they used a different “training dataset” for what love might look like.
Next Week's Pick: "Angel Beats"
Have you had the chance to watch Love Flops or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
Deals for You:
Supporting your anime binge sessions is what we do best! Here are some exclusive deals that’ll make your anime-watching experience even better.
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TokyoTreat Special: Use code "FEATUREDANIME" for $5 off your first box through this TokyoTreat link.
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“Am I Actually the Strongest?” follows Haruto, a 30-something shut-in that gets reincarnated with an absurd power that always reads “level 2, no element,” so as a baby he gets ditched in a forest who then is adopted almost immediately. When that happens he decides it is best to hide who he is so that he can chase the quietest life possible but instead he becomes the hero of justice. He is forced to keep up appearances to keep his little sister Char from outing him to his parents and he also gets mistaken for being a demon lord as well by demons thanks to his overwhelming aura, he also solves problems with ancient magic where is the limit is literally his imagination, so he makes literal clones, surveillance, and even jury-rigged internet back to his old world. The show leans hard on familiar OP-isekai tropes and comedy, with bits like a giant golem’s sudden confession, but under uses the goddess that plays little more than an info dump. Pacing is lightning fast across just 12 episodes, fun to binge but so quickly that Jack rewatched the ending wondering if he missed something. Character growth is minimal, and a lot is fed to you on a silver platter, making it an easy “junk-food” watch. Overall this is a light, funny palette cleanser that’s enjoyable but shallow as it has a thin story and unresolved plot.
Next Week's Pick: "Am I Actually The Strongest?"
Have you had the chance to watch The Executioner and Her Way of Life or any of our previous selections? We’d love to hear your thoughts and recommendations for future picks!
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• Jack’s Score: 5 / 10