I don't know enough to be sure, but I suspect that concealed withing the overall excellence of Girls und Panzer there might have been just a tiny smidgen of political commentary regards the efficacy of Japanese public works boondoggles.
1
The cynic in me says that using aircraft carrier hulls as towns for girl's schools, and making armored combat a school sport, is just a way to conceal their efforts to build an offensive naval capability, as well train entire generations of children in the art of war.
Posted by: Siergen at Wed Apr 3 16:32:31 2013 (Ao4Kw)
2
If we find out that the Ooarai Boys School sports include 'Force Reconery' and 'Subnmarinary' then I'll agree with you. Until then it's cute.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Wed Apr 3 20:27:45 2013 (F7DdT)
3
Not only that but this school ship is much smaller than any of the others that appeared in the show.
Posted by: AnimeBill at Thu Apr 4 19:01:54 2013 (+4CSu)
Preview clip for the 5th Yamato 2199 Movie.
This is different from the trailer below. It's the first 9 minutes of the 5th film (which translates to episode 15-18 of the series that airs this spring).
Spoilers abound so beware.
Also, it appears that the Imperial Guard is indeed a bunch of bastard coated bastards with bastard filling.
1
3 & 4 are from a one-off called Wasurenagumo / Li'l Spider Girl. It's on BakaBT. Haven't watched it myself, but reviewers have given it high ratings.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sat Mar 30 02:20:11 2013 (PiXy!)
2
Ah, and the first two are from Sasami-san@Ganbaranai. Funny, I was listening to a review of it on the Anime Pulse podcast last night (not, on the whole, a positive review) and had the inkling this might be it, even having never seen the show. Needed to do some fancy googlation to confirm, though.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sat Mar 30 02:50:42 2013 (PiXy!)
3
The last is from Joshiraku, which Pete and I liked quite a bit.
Posted by: Don at Sat Mar 30 09:04:09 2013 (NwobM)
I must confess that in spite of everything, I like Kadotani a lot. She's enthusiastic, calm under pressure and has balls of brass. She's a departure from the rest of the cast in that she was developed beyond the trope she represents.
Girls und Panzer is in a lot of ways a collection of tired old tropes and annoying recent ones. There is no new ground here. It's a sports anime with mechs aimed at a demographic that is so insecure that they can't abide male characters in their anime potentially competing for their 'waifus'. The result is that we get the galling notion that the war on boys has been carried to its logical conclusion so that males aren't allowed to compete in the sport at all.
Given this set-up and an overly large cast that seems to have been concieved by 31 die rolls compared against a moe/tsundere stock character generator, the only real question about the show would seem to be "To what depths of squalor will the panty shots descend?" But that is not the question I find myself asking. Instead I find myself grasping to figure out how this collection of mediocrities can have kicked so much ass that one can be forgiven for worrying about a trans-Pacific ass shortage.
What the HELL? How did they do that? This show is not refinement of stale tropes. This was frickking alchemy. It was lead into gold. Oh, and the answer to the unasked question above is "None". I don't think there was a panty shot in the whole show...they get points just for that alone. However, this show is about way more than propriety. Girls und Panzer manages to deal with ethics, sportsmanship and honor in a way few shows have.
The show does this without being preachy. Furthermore, despite what ought to be a completely predictable storyline, it manages to keep the viewers on the edge of their seat. The use of WW2 tanks was inspired and the battles with them were thoroughly entertaining and well thought out. Even the fairly by the numbers characters were well written to the point that one actually cared about them. These girls are smart and make up for their vastly inferior equipment by being clever and audacious.
The few problems with the show did not stem from the writing, or the directing but with a subcontractor who flamed out requiring two 'clips' episodes be inserted and the last two episodes be delayed over three months. After the spectacular surprise hit the show had been nothing could live up to the anticipation the last two episodes engendered.
Despite this handicap the two episode finale is a thoroughly satisfying rollercoaster that still manages to surprise.
The fact that the final showdown ends up being fight between sisters in a schoolyard...with tanks....is a nice touch.
Everything about this worked. The mockery of the big clumsy Porche Tank turning into the sick realization that "It's a big immovable Tank!" was priceless. The only thing that stretched credulity was the method for taking out the Maus...and I'll let that slide for the sheer awesome involved.
"...Through all the fire and the smoke, we will never give up hope..."
Here is the extended trailer for the 5th Yamato 2199 Movie. It's about twice as long as the one on the DVDs.
Be advised; there appears to be much spoilage therein.
Golly...Willakers!
One of the few bright spots in the upcoming spring season is the fact that they will start broadcasting this superb show on TV. This is about a year earlier than previously announced. I'm not sure if this bodes ill for a second season. However, BR sales seem to have been pretty good.
The overall story doesn't seem to be changed much, but compressing some of the early cours has allowed them to ad some stories and give both the crew and the enemies considerably greater depth. The preview above indicates they are going to continue to delve into the Gamillas court intrigues.
2
How do you know I'm not a foresaken noble, banished to this country because of a youthful, idealistic decision I made that brought shame to my entire house even as it saved an innocent child's life? What makes you think that I do not, even today, live in fear of assassins hired by my vindictive uncle, who, despite the families decision to simply cut me off, is consumed with a need for bloody vengeance against me for what he perceives as the worst sort of familial perfidy.
And for that matter what makes my vindictive uncle think that I do not have at the ready certain information to be released in the event of my death by foul play? Information that would not save or cost a single life if released now but would have most problematic legal ramifications for those individuals who were involved in a certain mining venture in the Balkans about 15 years ago?
Just asking.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Tue Mar 19 09:21:48 2013 (F7DdT)
They're willing to scream, "Ye're an eyeless, noseless, chickenless egg," but they totally elide "Oh Johnny dear, ye look so queer" from the chorus??
I do not understand today's music. Nope.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Thu Mar 21 15:38:43 2013 (cvXSV)
5
To be fair, the original version of the song doesn't HAVE a single chorus; it changes every time. Apparently the original tune doesn't reference Ceylon, either.
At least, as far as my exhaustive research (wikipedia) reveals.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Thu Mar 21 19:52:02 2013 (vZvpB)
GJ Club
I'd found a couple of cute animated .gifs and tracked down their source. When I read the premise for the show it did not excite me...at all. However, a bit of digging turned up the fact that despite the cast and premise it is based on a series of light novels...and not a dating sim.
So I gave an episode a whirl.
In a certain school with very garish uniforms four girls and a boy round out the membership of the mysterious GJ Club. The clubs purpose is unclear but within the tiny club room, the five young souls drink tea, play chess, change light-bulbs and have other such harrowing adventures....
Ghaaa! So...is this show set in Australia?
This is an odd one.
Case in point....
This here is Kirara Bernstein. She's...well she's an exchange student...from someplace. She doesn't speak Japanese confidently and is generally very quiet. She seems to be on Atkins. Kirrara is also exceedingly tall and a bit awkward. She nearly died when bitten by a black widow at age 4 and this has left her with a terrible fear of spiders. Is there anything else I'm failing to mention here?
About 2/3 of the way through episode one, Mao the rather manic club president and Nebbish McOrdinary here notice that, yes, there is indeed something odd about the girl sitting by the window.
...'kayy...not what I would have noticed.
Which precipitates a conversation that ranges from how there is no cut of meat on any animal that looks like that to whether or not eating it will allow them to "increase their hit points" and speculation on just how the HELL that thing Kirara's eating was prepared.
The other club members are Shion, an elegant but slightly out of touch genius chess player and Mao's younger (and much taller) sister Megumi who is the absolute master of the club tea service. The dude is named Kyoya and serves mainly to be the butt of pranks. He prefers Josei and Shojo mamga because they tend to actually have character development.
Artwise, GJ Club has got quite detailed backgrounds with the animation
itself being about average. There are occasionally some editing quirks
that are fairly clever.
Although his show's cast seems to consist entirely of cliches it has a fairly offbeat feel to it in part because the pacing and humor is rather dry, though there is some slapstick as well as the oddness evidenced above. By the
end of the first episode there are actual hints of personalities in some
of the characters.
I'm not sure what to make of this show...
However I laughed.. and it's cute so I'll probably watch at least a few more episodes to see where it goes.
Thus far it's way better than it ought to be.
UPDATE: It occurs to me that one of the things that seems so off center is that while it is cast like a harem show it's more a cute girls doing cute things sitcom with the caveat that one of them is a guy.
1
I once had some Austrian pork which looked a little bit like that - big old leathery lump of meat on a bone, sticking out on both sides. Big, heavy meal - this was a novelty place where they literally threatened to beat you if you didn't clear your plate - there was a red club hung on the wall for that express purpose. The pork was kind of nasty, actually .
Posted by: Mitch H. at Fri Mar 15 15:49:23 2013 (jwKxK)
Media Blasters Status / Other News
Media Blasters has posted an announcement on their website clarifying their situation. The rumor that they had no business liscence hit them hard as did an injury to the owner. Several titles are no longer in their possession and at least two are owned by them but with no plans for release. It seems that they intend to sell those rights to other companies.
The only
labels MB will continue to acquire and release in for 2013 are
AnimeWorks, Tokyo Shock and Kitty. In addition there will be a focus to
produce and release original productions through Fever Dreams.
So they are not in fact dead, though they are limping. I find it strange that they are going all in on their hentai line with one title a month in the pipeline. I would have thought that that would have been the hardest to get sales for given current technological realities. Perhaps the licenses were very cheap.
I noted in passing that Robert's Anime Corner Store recently covered this too, but I noticed a discrepancy between the RACS post (a few days old) and the current press release at Media Blasters. Squid Girl Season 2 is no longer on their list of "owned but not being distributed".
This is true on the Meada Blasters PR page and their Facebook page.
I wish they weren't being so koi... I'll just bob about here until they let minnow something"
I don't know if this omission means anything but I allow myself a tenuous hope as their dub of Squid Girl season 1 was superb.
Crunchyroll will be streaming the missing episodes of Girls und Panzer on March 28th.
"Panzer VORE!"
"No Saori, the word is VOR...You'll loose your broadcast license if you say vore on the air.
"I don't get it""
"That's 'cause you're a good person."
Gentle readers, if you don't get the joke don't google it. TRUST ME.
I wish to God I hadn't.
Ghost Division
Despite the music choice this AMV is actually surprisingly faithful to Song of the Sky....and yet it is COMPLETELY misleading as to what sort of tale this thoughtful and inspiring show is.
My Response
I'm massively busy and may not be online for the rest of the week. However, I note that Steven Den Beste has made an argument which, although, admittedly compelling, is nevertheless one I cannot allow to go unanswered.
Yamato 2199's Niimi Kaoru done by Toten (whose NSFW E-artbooks can be purchased here)
1
Steven wins by a spine; poor Niimi is a candidate for the Escher Girls site, in the "boobs and butt", "serious swayback", and "vacuum sealed for freshness" categories. Nice glasses, though. :-)
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Wed Feb 20 01:43:32 2013 (+cEg2)
2
I kinda like the "vacuum sealed for freshness" category. But then, one of my buddies is a fetish photographer.
Posted by: Mauser at Fri Feb 22 06:13:07 2013 (cZPoz)
3
I'm pretty sure that in a skintight rubberized suit, "freshness" is one thing not preserved.
The show does seem to explicitly point out that they are skinsuits and can survive several minutes in a vacuum by donning their helmet and gloves....longer with tanks to complement the helmet's re-breather.
I find it deeply sexist that the male crew members (other than the fighter jocks) are denied these lifesaving uniforms. In the event of a depressurization the men would have to strip, put on a skinsuit, helmet and gloves, whereas the women are already mostly fitted out for survival. I suppose it could be explained away as chivalry...ie: there aren't enough skinsuits to go around so give them to the ladies, but I suspect the foul hand of misandry is at work.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Fri Feb 22 20:38:19 2013 (vp6an)
This one actually looks to be a test, but it's a very well timed test.
Also: Tsukasa LOL
Oh lord...I guess this was inevitable...
I don't "get" Touhou, but this fan-made video is very nicely done with a superb use of rotoscoping. I understand it's several years old but I'd never encountered it till last year.
Here's a Chinese version of the song using a piano and a violin. It also has a clever take on the video...
...rotoscoping the rotoscoping with sand.
Finally here is proof that less is sometimes more. The original vocals, same basic video exact same 'choreography'(it looks to be a re-skinning of the shadow vid) but this time done with Miku Miku Dance.
It's actually a perfectly decent video and a very impressive job by MMD standards....and yet...
1
One of the related videos to the first Bad Apple video was a stop motion done by printing out the frames and animating their layout throughout a room. That was an incredible effort too, but not like the sand.
Posted by: Mauser at Tue Feb 19 05:22:25 2013 (cZPoz)
1
I've never gotten around to seeing the original anime. A few times when I went looking for it, all I found were what appeared to be sequels. Is the original version still available?
I am looking forward to this version, though I do prefer my space pirates to be a bit, younger...
Posted by: Siergen at Sun Feb 3 21:15:33 2013 (Ao4Kw)
2
Siergen...why don't you have a seat over there....
While you wait for Mr. Hansen you can watch the whole 42 episode original series on Crunchyroll. Be advised it is as much a horror series as it is an adventure series but it's got Kei Yuki in it and she's legal and smart and cute.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sun Feb 3 21:38:26 2013 (vp6an)
3This Fan film I found linked to the second video seems to have scored some alternate footage, including some closeups of Emeraldis at the 51 second mark. Never quite pictured her as the latex type, but it's... nice.
Posted by: Mauser at Mon Feb 4 02:01:56 2013 (cZPoz)
4
In the pink skinsuit? No, that's Kei Yuki the ships third officer.
Here she is introducing Tadashi, (the Audience Identification Character) to the ships cook.
Note that unlike some other shows the male lead gets a skinsuit too.
Here they all are asking the important questions
The important answer is "NO!"
Emereldas is captain of another ship entirely.
Note that except for the last OAV series, which is (sort of) a sequel to the first series, the "sequels" are all actually re-imaginings with completely different universes and similar characters.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Mon Feb 4 06:38:43 2013 (vp6an)
5
I've always wondered -- is Kei Yuki from Harlock related to Yuki from Starblazers/Yamato? Or are they just drawn alike?
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Mon Feb 4 08:33:55 2013 (cvXSV)
6
Kei Yuki and Yuki Mori are completely different and the series are in separate universes. Both women are Matsumoto designs though.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Mon Feb 4 08:48:20 2013 (vp6an)
7
Matsumoto is one step above Tezuka when it comes to character design. And his long and lithe females have long attracted me to his work (although the potato people have a counterbalancing effect).
I've been curious to see his debut work, "Sexaroid", although not because of the title.... well, maybe a little. But 1969 vintage anime isn't really a hot commodity these days.
Posted by: Mauser at Tue Feb 5 04:50:49 2013 (cZPoz)
Because We Aim to Please:
Recently PeteZaitcev won the "Why is the blog infested with Lamias?" contest and as a prize got to pick a post topic and chose to ask what my favorite manga is and why I like it better than others.
I must confess that I've been exceedingly busy and haven't read much manga at all for the last 18 or so months...with one exception. While my to-read pile has gotten quite large, I've stuck with reading Yotsuba&!all that time.
Yotsuba; the titular character of this charming book, is a precocious child who has been adopted by her father from some far away place in the developing world. To her naive eyes everything in Japan from sunflowers to doorbells is fascinating and a potential springboard to adventure...or mischief.There is no real plot, though there is a bit of continuity. The series consists of sketch comedy and is greatly assisted by Azuma Kiyohiko'soutstanding comedic timing in the comic medium as well as his amazing ability to see the world with a child-like sense of wonder. This, the expressive art, memorable secondary characters and refreshing innocence make this outstanding series a rare gem. I highly recommend it to anyone.
However, EVERYONE likes Yotsuba&! (except bad people). I don't think I have ever seen a bad review. Furthermore, since I haven't been reading other manga for over a year I can't give the comparative review Pete asked for or the book deserves.
Finally, it is obvious from his request that Pete's request for a review was not at all what he really wanted, but a fallback position.
It seems that Pete is, in reality, uninterested in such refreshing innocence and actually wanted something entirely "other" but felt it was a bridge too far. Well we here at Brickmuppet Blog aim to please, so gird you loins as we cross that bridge...The Bridge Over the River Kowai.
Good people should not look below the fold, for that way lies depravity.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Fri Jan 4 01:26:03 2013 (RqRa5)
4
It didn't quite kill it for me, but it kicked it in the kneecaps (along with the other bits I mentioned). I'm going to see if they regain their footing, but I'm not optimistic.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Fri Jan 4 01:53:04 2013 (vp6an)
5
I liked the originals better, mostly because each brother was focused on his relationship with one monster girl. If I were adapting it, I think I'd have gone with a boarding-school setting, with a mixed-gender Kaiju Social Integration Club having to deal with each new monster as she arrives and creates her unique brand of trouble.
Still a familiar formula, and all the current stories would transfer over with little change, but I think it would hold up a lot longer. The problem with making it a harem is that he can't tell in-depth stories about just one girl; for instance, I can't see him successfully doing something like the two Dullahan strips from the original.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Fri Jan 4 11:59:43 2013 (2XtN5)
6
I actually agree that the little strips were more satisfying . However,
I've tended to attribute that to one of my own sick personal fantasist
kinks....
The
charm of the strips and the early issues here was that they characters
were IN LOVE and were working to make their relationships work despite
hurdles like different backgrounds and really sharp claws. The current
harem dynamic ruins that because there really ought not to be any
hesitation in his choice...he might be constricted but he ought not to
be conflicted, otherwise he's a heel.
Now, he has inadvertently,
legally, betrothed himself to the Centaur, and she will be ruined and
there will be political ramifications if he doesn't choose not to
divorce her..that adds dramatic (albeit silly) tension especially since
she's a likeable loon. But beyond that the show will quickly loose the
intimacy that initially made it charming.
Counter-intuitively,
this current set-up could be salvaged if they'd add more...guys. Just
have him do some more carpentry and turn happy hellspawn house into a
Maison. Then have the strip focus on the misadventures of Monstergrrls
of the month and boyfriend. This would allow a closer focus on the
creaturettes, a wider variety of "audience identification characters"
and it gets back to the idea of two people trying to make things work
despite considerable engineering challenges.
Pitch it as Boys Be...but with twenty/thirty somethings and tentacles.
Oh..
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Fri Jan 4 18:14:09 2013 (vp6an)
8
Well.... I agree, it's slipping. Now they've added a mer-girl. Who was obviously that from the start, in the wheelchair.
And to amp the raciness, we got to see what happens when Slime gets dehydrated. Suffice to say, she'll go after moisture...anywhere she can find it. It was a very hot day for the girls.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Sun Dec 23 22:49:05 2012 (cymHZ)
4
She has a weird relative, who gives her a relevantly-injured bear every time Miho gets injured.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Mon Dec 24 20:15:18 2012 (cvXSV)
5
Well, that relieves us of the fear that Miho is nuts, but it means she's accident prone, which is nearly as bad. And it means that "nuts" runs in the family.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Thu Jan 3 08:11:50 2013 (cvXSV)
8
"Nuts" may be somewhat culture-defined. Remember the preschooler rhyme "Neko funjatta", made known by Kampher? The kids sing it in preschool. So yeah, maybe not "nuts" but "slightly eccentric".
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Thu Jan 3 09:03:47 2013 (RqRa5)
SAO Ends
When last we left our hero he was riding a bike all out... at night...in a snowstorm...trying to get to the hospital to check on his beloved.
As the episode begins, Kazuto is haunted by two visions, one of Asuna warmly greeting him,... the other of her glassy eyed corpse lying in bed, her brain fried by the log out kill switch which Sugo might have re-instated as a safeguard...
Arriving at the hospital he ditches his bike at the gate, gingerly makes his way across the icy parking lot, nearly collides with another pedestrian, almost falling over in the process, regains his balance, bleeds profusely as he approaches the steps and....wait.....what?
Hemophilia perhaps?
Oh...that lone pedestrian.
His name is Nobuyuki Sugo.
Perhaps you remember him. He's the villain who just got killed in the virtual world with the pain blockers set to zero. He hurt a LOT. He's not happy and he's not in the virtual world anymore. This is reality, and in the real world he's not actually a fairy king. He's the number two man in a major zaibatsu. He has people who will lie for him and a staff of people willing to carry out Block 10 type experiments on people minds for him. Whatever setback he may have had in a dippy VR game, there are only two things that stand between him and total victory right now. Those two things are Asuna Yuki and Kazuto and he aims to rid the world of them. Asuna, being in a hospital room will take some finesse, but Kazuto is a nobody, a gamer, sad little out of shape teenager who hid from the world in a VR game and who now stands before Sugo armed with nothing but his own clotting blood and his shattered delusions of adequacy.
It's Mad Doctor Stabby!
Sugo is armed with big ass diving knife (which is illegal BTW). Kazuto is a law abiding citizen in a weapons free zone. It SUCKS to be Kazuto. Kazuto tries "dodge" but it is ineffective. Kazuto slips on the ice and hurts himself. He gets a nasty knife cut to his face and Sugo uses "kicks the living crap out of Kazuto". It's super effective.
All those years of video games didn't actually prepare Kazuto for this.
"This boss-fight is serious business!"
Of course Sugo is not running at 100%. His painful virtual death burst a blood vessel in his right eye and his depth perception is shot. This causes him to miss his killing blow by a wide margin. Kazuto is not completely helpless either, he HAS been practicing ken-do all this time and as Sugo lunges again he forces the fiend to loose his footing on the ice. Kazuto finally gets the knife to Sugo's throat.... there is a quick flashback to Sugo molesting Asuna in the hospital bed, in the virtual world, of the pain he inflicted on Kazuto, of the sadism Kazuto and Asuna endured and.....the knife dances across Sugo's throat...
...but only just.
Kazuto, with great effort, refrains from killing the bastard, who visibly wets himself and collapses.
Kazuto staggers into the hospital only to find it empty. The receptionists, the nursing station, security....gone. No doubt Sugo has ordered them away...Sugo was already here.
He goes to the twelfth floor and stands outside Asuna's room in terror. He then hears the voice of Y.U.I. telling him to go in...he does of course and...
Yay!
Well that was a nice ending. We...wait what? 12 more minutes?
....
....
What follows is some perfunctory narration and a few character bits as we learn the following:
*Sugo went to jail because one of his employees ratted on him.
*The whole virtual reality online gaming industry collapsed as a result of the ensuing scandal.
*The 300 "test subjects" awoke with no memory of their ordeal.
*All those in Japan who were in school at the time they were trapped in SAO, are indeed now in a special school just for them.
*Asuna and Kazuto are still dating.
*A few friends from SAO (the cast from the first cour) gather at Sigils bar from time to time to reminisce.
*Oh...and that world seed Kazuto received from Kayaba?
its a starting program for virtual worlds. Sigil and Kazuto put it online as freeware and now the web is full of many versions of VRMMORPGs run by small groups, tiny companies and even individuals. All are cross compatible and based on the world designs of a homicidal maniac using the same interface devices proven to have a nearly perfected mind control capability. WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG!?
The last scene of the show is all the surviving cast gathering in Alfheim (which has been migrated to a private server ) for a momentous event. Someone has rebooted Aincard...the world of Sword Art Online and brought it into Alfheim to replace the rather empty world tree.
...and well....It looks like Kazuto and Asuna really want to LIVE THAT NIGHTMARE AGAIN. They ask "Leaf" to come along just to add a bit of squicky awkwardness to the proceedings. Then they all fly off thumbing their virtual noses at any thoughts of adjusting to life in the real world.
Asuna as a Fairy inviting "Leaf" on their quest, to clear all 100 levels This time fer sure!
So...while the first half of the episode was superb, it ends up being an uneven and rather forced ending to a very uneven series.
The second cour saw Asuna largely wasted (though she quite explicitly never gave up). It must be said that it had some really compelling moments too. The self reflection of Kirito as he contemplated the vast gulf between his online persona and his actual power occurred in a couple of episodes including this one and was neat. The fact that the heroes often got by by being clever was enjoyable too. There were some REALLY cool concepts touched on in the second cour as well, but none of them were really explored well. In particular the epilogue just seems waaay too pat and appears to have overlooked a major plot point of the series.
Yes the various Zaibatsu don't control the VR worlds
anymore, (Yay small developers! Stick it too the man!) but these vr worlds are more widespread than ever...and all use the same
architecture as SAO. If anything, there is more likelihood that some of
these worlds are actually set up to perfect mind control tech...and all the
players potential guinea pigs and slaves.
The show in many ways had a "corporate ending" with everything sort of reset and fan favorite characters re-introduced and no real development other than giving everyone the in game ability to fly. This will allow games, light novels, CDs and perhaps a sequel, but the show which wowed so many of us with it's character development largely tosses that development out the window with the ending of the finale. In the end the virtual world becomes not a reflection of the real world, but an escape from it...Now that could be a cautionary tale itself, but it is not presented as such here.
The show was at its best when it was playing against type.
The first cour (episodes 1-14) was remarkably unpredictable. It was particularly interesting as it became
an adventure/romance with a hero and heroine who were smart, dynamic, awesome and yet believable...and who complemented and completed each other in an unusually exciting but perfectly healthy relationship
...and that is how I'll want to remember this show.
1
[side note; the unclosed spoiler tag ended up taking out the entry trailer, including the comment button]
Yeah, I was afraid this was how it was going to end, based on what I read about the novels; they weren't willing to go for an original ending, and they should have. Worse, it seems the author doesn't really know what to do with the cast after getting them back together; there are two side stories that take place in Alfheim (one of which is centered on Asuna), but the rest of the novels have Our Hero going off into other virtual worlds alone. And, yes, the author has written a story in which all the girls gang up to marry Tenchi Kirito in an accelerated-time VR, although that one may no longer be canon.
In fairness to The Seed,
it's established that only people wearing first-gen VR helmets are vulnerable to Sugou's mind control; in fact, the impossibility of truly harming someone through the second-gen helmets is pretty much the plot hook for the next arc. (and, no, it doesn't make sense that they'd have added exactly the right safeties to prevent abuses that hadn't been invented yet, especially with Sugou on the team, but...)
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Sun Dec 23 03:46:40 2012 (2XtN5)
2[side note; the unclosed spoiler tag ended up taking out the entry trailer, including the comment button]
Yeah...we're intrigued by that bug and we're working on it.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sun Dec 23 12:08:39 2012 (vp6an)
While I haven't seen the anime yet, I've read translations of some of the light novels. I'd agree that ALO is very much a low point in the series and I almost dropped at that point It does get better afterwards.
Two of the major side stories are pretty good. The Gale Gun Online (GGO) one introduces Shinon, another strong female character. Unfortunately it also raises Kirito's Marty Stu-ness to new heights. Mother's Rosario, however, gives Kirito the "more deban" sign to Asuna's lead. Both are setup to the Alicilization arc.
The Alicilization arc turns things around with Kirito being the one trapped in a virtual world and Asuna having to do the Real World (tm) leg work to get him back. Though Kirito still maintains a bit too much of his Marty Stu-ness, unfortunately.
Posted by: StargazerA5 at Sun Dec 23 16:07:31 2012 (5YSpE)
4
As an MMO gamer myself, I found the first cour to particularly satisfying. All of the player types and behaviors in SAO are seen in any popular MMO, but of course with much lesser consequences.
If I'd found myself stuck in SAO, and known that dying was fatal in real life, I'd probably try to lock myself in an inn - I die far too frequently in games to risk "leveling up" and beating the game...
Posted by: Siergen at Sun Dec 23 22:15:27 2012 (Ao4Kw)
Episode 24 of Sword Art Online brings the Asuna in a Cage arc to an end of sorts....maybe.
The biggest disappointment of the episode is that Lightning Flash Asuna doesn't get to do much except put on a brave face. This is terribly unfair to the character who has really been a very well realized female lead.
The journey of Y.U.I. and Kirito to Asuna's prison was almost anticlimactic, until it wasn't.
Sugo is an exquisitely wicked villain. A petty, venal yet brilliant man who is utterly devoid of conscience and on the cusp of controlling human minds. He is also present and has moderator privileges so they're screwed.
What follows is about 12 miutes of really disturbing sadism as he reduces or heroes strength to one, increases the gravity, engages and dials up their pain sensitivity, tortures Kirito, molests Asuna and taunts them with tales of how he will edit their minds. Kirito takes a moment from this agony to reflect upon the fact that for all his skill levels, he is a kid who plays video games and little else and has accomplished nothing in the real world. Yeah...utter defeat.
Fortunately for our heroes, Ubu Roi was right. Akihiko Kayaba is alive, or at least a copy of him exists
in the mainframe. It seems that he and Sugo have been rivals for some
time and he was most displeased when Sugo took over his game and
re-skinned it into Alfheim online. He gives Kirito HIS password, which as he designed the master game, Sword Art Online, trumps Sugos. Kirito "kills" Sugo, but does not do so quickly.
He then logs Asuna out, tries to log log himself out, but is informed by Kayaba that there is a price for his help. Kayaba gived him a shiny he refers to as the world seed and tells Kirito to plant it when the time is right.
Kirito puts it in his inventory and logs out.
Kirito awakens, thanks his cousin for her help and rushes off into the snow to see Asuna.
...And so that's how it ends. Not by wits, skill, determination or courage, but by sudden divine (or in this case debased) intervention. This was a vastly less satisfying ending than that of the first cour. Nevertheless it did not suck. The second half of this show has been fairly uneven in comparison with the first, but it has still been far above average.
Note that we HAVEN'T SEEN ASUNA AWAKE IN THE REAL WORLD YET and there are still at least 2 episodes to go.
1
Well, I was getting tripped up by the bug, back on Sunday, but maybe now...
My next prediction:
failure to account for Sugo in the real-world is about to bite Kirito in the a$$. I think that's where Asuna is going to have her chance to shine, when she denounces him in front of her father and pledges her life to Kirito. That should quickly resolve the problem and we can get on to an episode to deal with the seed.
Also, damn but Kirito got medieval on Sugo. He deserved it too.
Posted by: ubu at Wed Dec 19 17:08:06 2012 (SlLGE)
2
Oh, and it wasn't so much debased divine intervention as it was databased divine intervention.
Oh, I am so going to hell for that one...
Posted by: ubu at Wed Dec 19 17:12:34 2012 (SlLGE)
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I'm not sure that Sugo is still a problem in the real world. Remember the comment that with the threshold below 2, Kirito's real world body would be taking damage. And then Kirito set the threshold to 0 before getting medieval on Sugo. It's entirely possible that Sugo is dead, or a drooling idiot.
Posted by: David at Fri Dec 21 14:58:39 2012 (I6iFS)
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