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Ameku M.D: Doctor Detective Episode 1-3

Grisaia: Phantom Trigger Episode 2

Magic Maker: How to Make Magic in Another World Episode 1

Possibly the Greatest Alchemist of All Time Episode 2
 
Dr. Stone: Science Future episode 1 No right answer.

Momentary Lily episode 2 Routes.

Rurouni Kenshin -Kyoto Disturbance- episode 37 Slaughter.

Trillion Game episode 14 Password.

Dragon Ball Z (Rewatch) episodes 8, 11, 17-24
 
Ah My Buddha!! episodes 14-26: It appears that, between season 1 and 2, Ikkou had his brain removed (or it melted due to the constant fanservice. I loved the bit where the girls were shocked that Ikkou ran away with the cute blonde from a rival temple who had kept thrusting her (often naked) body at him. Especially when you consider how his life at the temple is one of constant mental and physical abuse from all the women around him. It's amazing how much cruelty you can get away with ... if you're six half naked teenage girls. The story made very little sense. Not that people are watching it for the storyline!
 
Magic Maker: How to Make Magic in Another World ep1: I didn't have a good feeling from the title but this tonally inconsistent disaster somehow managed to be both more boring and more bizarre than expected. It's actually a stealth-isekai which initially drops hints about the main boy's reincarnation through his indulgent older sister's perspective, which is at least unique and eliminates the usual monologuing, even though she has no discernible personality other than 'I'll take care of my little brother' (a line she repeats in nearly every scene). The lead is desperate for his new world to involve magic and delighted when he finally discovers it via a drawn-out fishing scene (was it intended to be funny that his sister had told everyone in the entire world about the strange phenomenon other than him?)

Then there was a strange swerve into incest territory which came out of absolutely nowhere; not knowing the male lead's pre-reincarnation background makes it hard to decide exactly how creepy it is meant to be when the siblings make their 'innocent' promise to one another. The cute designs and sluggish pace mean that there's no dramatic tension at all up until that moment, which unfortunately means that the incest elements come across as more narratively important than the actual magic-making. Ugh. It's dumb, but it's not a bad first episode to watch with friends if you just want to laugh at something daft?

Honey Lemon Soda ep1: Finally, an ordinary shoujo series where everyone is actually in the right body and there are no lazy pop-up menus or insipid adventuring guilds. After moving to a new school our heroine is still suffering from the aftereffects of years of bullying, and it doesn't help that some of those bullies are still around. Fortunately, she's caught the eye of a self-assured classmate who seems to be willing to help her break out of her shell, even if he does comes across as a little bit too perfect at times. There's not much more to say than that so far as not much has actually happened. The series does rather bludgeon the viewer with 'honey' and 'lemon soda' references, which ended up being more distracting than cute, but overall the aesthetic is pleasant enough and there are enough characters already to make me hope that we'll learn more about the leads' friends as well as the relationship between the two of them. The ending credits were nice and lively too (a rarity this season!)

The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World ep1: It's exactly as the title says, so if you're still delighted by gimmicky-yet-samey isekai shows, this one will probably do the job. Our hero finds himself in another world for pretty much no reason, complete with an overpowered item box which is magically connected to a shopping warehouse back in the real world. Using pop-up screens he can trade materials from his new world with Japan, earning currency with which he can buy literally anything he wants (with a few real world limitations, which presumably will eventually stop mattering since he has some overtly ridiculous gadgets in the credits). Anything he buys is instantaneously available to him; he can even summon crude weapons even while running away from monsters to fight them off. It's kind of funny that he doesn't have access to the actual Internet (yet?) other than the shopping site, so he's having to figure out which products to sell by trial and error - of course, this being modern anime, none of his struggles actually result in more than a second of doubt before everything always resolves in his favour anyway.

It's far from the worst of the isekai nonsense this season but it's also kind of crummy. In its favour, it doesn't waste time stretching the boring stuff out at the start (if anything, the isekai scene-setting blazed by too quickly!) and the main character isn't the usual cynical, woman-hating edgelord type. The central joke seems to be keeping track of the hero's income and expenses via endless on-screen transaction logs. By the end of the episode even the lead character was pointing out how nothing actually makes sense and I don't have much hope that this is ever going to turn into anything more than a silly diversion.

The Apothecary Diaries s2 ep1: Why is this show so good? It's almost embarrassing how much better it is than the other fantasy efforts this season. It's been a while since The Apothecary Diaries last graced my screen but this charming episode about Maomao looking after a kitten skilfully reintroduced all of the main characters, neatly blending little nuggets of worldbuilding and character development in with the story without ever feeling stilted. Everyone is still beautiful and all of the details feel as though they've been added with genuine affection for the setting. I feel all caught up and ready to see what happens next!

Blue Exorcist: Blue Night Saga ep1: While not quite as graceful a return (the huge gap before the previous season has still left me feeling a bit wobbly about everything that's going on even now), this season of Blue Exorcist kicks off with a lengthy flashback to before the main characters were even born. We finally get a proper (more manga-accurate?) introduction to the boys' mother with a full episode devoted to her backstory. We really do need to see this but at the same time, it's a bit frustrating to have no updates on what's going on in the present day; the previous arc ended in the middle of some rather major upheaval!

R
 
Dragon Ball Daima (Japanese) - Episode 13

Frieren: Beyond Journey's End (Japanese) - Episode 22

Non-Anime

Sonic the Hedgehog 3
- Movie (Complete)

I'm a little late to this as I was to busy last month so I unfortunately came across a lot of spoilers by accident but despite that it didn't take away from my enjoyment of this movie.

Sonic 3 is definitely my favourite entry in the series so far and with each entry it's feeling closer to the games which I'm happy about, with this one adapting one of my favourite games in the series, Sonic Adventure 2.

There are a lot of fantastic action scenes in this and a lot of silly but funny and entertaining scenes with Dr. Eggman and Gerald Robotnik (both played by Jim Carrey).

I really enjoyed Maria as well from the flashback scenes, she has more personality than her game counterpart for sure (not that I dislike her game incarnation though).

All the other previous characters are as great as ever and all get a lot of fun scenes.

From the beginning though every moment of this film was entertaining and is definitely an improvement on the first two movies which I enjoy a lot as well.

I look forward to Sonic 4 as well with what was teased during the mid-credits scene, I'm feeling very hopeful for this movie series.

EDIT: I didn't even talk about Shadow, he was a great character in this as well though I feel Keanu Reeves could improve on his performance a bit going forward but it wasn't a bad performance by any means. Shadow is a special character for the series though so takes a lot to get him just right, which even SEGA and Sonic Team have struggled with over the years (though was fixed a lot with Sonic x Shadow Generations).
 
Dr. STONE: Science Future Episode 1

Even Given the Worthless “Appraiser” Class, I’m Actually the Strongest Episode 1

The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World Episode 1
 
Damepri Anime Caravan episodes 1-5: this is quite fun. Very similar in tone to Ouran High, with the sensible female lead surrounded by a cast of bizarre males all competing for her attention.

I love that show! It's so unashamedly dumb and silly, and it's a crying shame that hardly anyone ever talks about it. I think it pitched itself perfectly as the anime spin-off of a mobile game, just having fun with the weird characters and settings and making wry background jokes about the genre.

R
 
watched a lot of episode 1s from this season and they have ranged from mediocre to bad
so watching S2E1 of Apothecary Diaries was like slipping into a warm bath after being out in the wind and rain. felt like it was 5 minutes long tho, let me stay in the bath longer dammit!
 
I Got a Cheat Skill in Another World and Became Unrivaled in the Real World

All finished. Turned out it was more fun than I expected.

Un-Go
Episodes 2-7
Trying my best to not think of Inga as fanservice. Bit too dangerous.

The Irregular at Magic High School S2
4-6
Not enjoying as much as S1

By the Grace of the Gods S2
Watched up to episode 8.
Liking it but a bit annoyed that they teased me with some fights early on.
 
As ever I find it fascinating reading @Rui 's first episode reviews in this thread, especially as someone who very very rarely gets around to watching any modern anime and has never seen an actual episode of an isekai show before. Most of the isekai shows sound so shockingly, bizarrely crumby that it just seems deranged that they still apparently dominate the modern anime landscape. It's like, how is this possible? How has this low effort gruel struck such a chord with the anime viewing public that well over a decade later it's still this popular? Are there any signs of its demise on the horizon? Don't people want something better? I know I've asked all these questions before and there's probably no clear answer to them, but as a relative outsider it's really a curious phenomenon. I think I suggested this before, but I can help but feel that isekai's popularity must point to something going terribly wrong in society. Probably an unconscious reaction to the declining Japanese economy as capitalism in its death throes stage is warping society and eating up the space for genuinely thoughtful creativity and feeding people this slop to numb themselves with. Maybe I'm being harsh though, I don't know.
 
Dragon Ball Daima episode 13 Big time.

I May Be a Guild Receptionist, but I'll Solo Any Boss to Clock Out on Time episode 1 Piling up.

Sorairo Utility (TV) episode 2 Old becomes new.

Tasokare Hotel episode 2 Buried.

Dragon Ball Z (Rewatch) episodes 25-38, Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest (Film), 44-51
 
As ever I find it fascinating reading @Rui 's first episode reviews in this thread, especially as someone who very very rarely gets around to watching any modern anime and has never seen an actual episode of an isekai show before. Most of the isekai shows sound so shockingly, bizarrely crumby that it just seems deranged that they still apparently dominate the modern anime landscape. It's like, how is this possible? How has this low effort gruel struck such a chord with the anime viewing public that well over a decade later it's still this popular? Are there any signs of its demise on the horizon? Don't people want something better? I know I've asked all these questions before and there's probably no clear answer to them, but as a relative outsider it's really a curious phenomenon. I think I suggested this before, but I can help but feel that isekai's popularity must point to something going terribly wrong in society. Probably an unconscious reaction to the declining Japanese economy as capitalism in its death throes stage is warping society and eating up the space for genuinely thoughtful creativity and feeding people this slop to numb themselves with. Maybe I'm being harsh though, I don't know.

Out of curiosity, have you seen any episodes of the best pre-current-craze more shoujo-y isekai (Escaflowne TV (the movie wasn't the best but it's just a retelling that you don't need to watch to appreciate the series fully), Magic Knight Rayearth TV (ditto on the OVA), The Twelve Kingdoms)? I don't dislike all modern isekai (I like Re:Zero and That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, and while Grimgar of Ash and Fantasy was short it was quite good for what it was), but would still recommend those first three (shoujo) titles even if you're not into the newer mostly shonen/seinen isekai series :) I get what you mean about these titles, but tbf I'm usually not the first to watch any new anime that comes out as I will typically wait for an entire season to air and then look at critics' and audiences' overall opinion of the series before deciding whether to watch or not. I have questions about the sheer volume of these types of shows that we're getting, but feel as though I often don't get around to watching even non-isekai modern anime that I'd probably love, like I haven't become a grumpy curmudgeon that wants the new shows to get off my lawn, I just am trying to work through a backlog of older things that I didn't get around to yet, my point being that I feel a bit of a hypocrite wagging my finger at modern isekai if I'm not really watching a lot of just released anything isekai or no? I guess this stuff has taken the place of some of the less inspired shonen action and harem romcom titles we used to be inundated with?
 
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Dan Da Dan ep11-12 [end]

On the whole, I’ve enjoyed Dan Da Dan so far, but would echo what others have been saying about ep12 being a sour note to end the cour on. I’d hoped we were past the dissonant sexual-assault imagery, and yet here we are.

Sorairo Utility ep1

Kind of bounced off the pilot film for Sorairo Utility, but I enjoyed this first episode a lot more - having more context for who the characters are and what their story is made all the difference. I wanted this to be ‘what if Laid Back Camp, but also golf’ and that looks very much like what the show is shaping up to be. Wouldn’t object to seeing a bit more of laconic side-character Izumi’s story as well actually, ‘trendy gyaru plays shogi’ seems like a solid premise in its own right.

Zenshu ep1

Jumping for joy at the prospect of another Isekai, I was not, but I’d seen the sakuga clip of main character Hirose using her animator skills and I was curious to see what the show was like. The setup, with Hirose having already seen the movie of the story she’s ended up in, is appealing and there are some nice touches, like the Tezuka-style style designs for some of the side characters emphasising that this wasn’t a particularly new movie, but like Rui, I’m not yet convinced there’ll be enough here to hold my attention for the whole series.

It does surprise me that Crunchyroll aren’t pushing the series harder though. Considering that this is a Mappa offering and seems to have been fairly well received so far, I would have expected it to at least be in the list of simulcasts for this month on their app.
 
Damepri Anime Caravan episodes 6-12: I really enjoyed this. It didn't take it too seriously (until the action packed finale, at least). The best episode by far was at the hot springs (cue Benny Hill theme).
 
As ever I find it fascinating reading @Rui 's first episode reviews in this thread, especially as someone who very very rarely gets around to watching any modern anime and has never seen an actual episode of an isekai show before. Most of the isekai shows sound so shockingly, bizarrely crumby that it just seems deranged that they still apparently dominate the modern anime landscape. It's like, how is this possible? How has this low effort gruel struck such a chord with the anime viewing public that well over a decade later it's still this popular? Are there any signs of its demise on the horizon? Don't people want something better? I know I've asked all these questions before and there's probably no clear answer to them, but as a relative outsider it's really a curious phenomenon. I think I suggested this before, but I can help but feel that isekai's popularity must point to something going terribly wrong in society. Probably an unconscious reaction to the declining Japanese economy as capitalism in its death throes stage is warping society and eating up the space for genuinely thoughtful creativity and feeding people this slop to numb themselves with. Maybe I'm being harsh though, I don't know.

I cannot imagine most of these ever make their money back at this point, but every now and then there's a legitimate mega-hit (you can usually see those coming a mile away) and production committees freak out and throw money at more derivative remixes in the hope of cashing in. I am leery of anything with 'isekai', 'light novel' or 'fantasy' in the description these days because so much of it is low-effort trash, but the reason I keep on persevering is that there are - very occasionally - gems which manage to inject some genuine imagination into the tired premise. I loved Grimgar. I didn't hate The Faraway Paladin. The first season of The Devil is a Part-Timer was good (shame about the rest). More recently, I found No Longer Allowed in Another World perfectly watchable. My partner is shamelessly addicted to That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime. Even the awful villainess subgenre, which I generally hate with a blazing passion, can sometimes turn in silly stuff like I'm in Love with the Villainess. But oh my goodness, there's still so much being made which does absolutely nothing to stand out.

---

Even Given the Worthless “Appraiser” Class, I’m Actually the Strongest ep1: This show is so generic that even my isekai apologist friend was sure that he'd already watched it several times before from the title. The key art showing a standard-issue hero with a glowing eye and a bevy of copy-paste cutesy, blushing elf girls around him didn't help. Weirdly, it wasn't actually that bad in spite of everything; it uses the formula where the lead is downtrodden since birth because of the stupid magic/job system in his world. He sets out to be an adventurer anyway (I genuinely cannot see why) and teams up with a pair of jerks who abuse him physically and verbally with no remorse - nothing new there, then, but when he's ditched mid-dungeon he ends up suffering through a series of events which result in his fortunes training dramatically (and his lousy 'appraise' skill to summon pop-up tooltips gets a power-up). So there's nothing original to be found, but the production values seem quite good. It feels as though the staff behind the anime are at least trying to present the material in an engaging way, so it comes across as one of the better examples of this cursed subgenre. I'm still not going to bother continuing because the first episode did nothing to convince me that there's anything more to be mined from this overused formula, but if you like violent shows about a bullied adventurer getting tougher then at least this one is relatively well-presented.

Welcome to Japan, Ms. Elf! ep1: Am I the only one who thinks it always sounds stilted in English when shows translate 'san' as a formal title like this? Anyway, I was moderately impressed by this show because I thought that it was going to be much worse than it was. The isekai elements are handled by having the hero (an adult office worker) secretly slip into the other world whenever he's asleep, so he's leading a double life but not at all weird about it. There are unfortunate allusions to a game-like menu system because the lead spelled his character name wrong (which means that people refer to him by a cuter version of his name for no reason), but aside from that weird quirk those elements aren't important and could have been cut out entirely without affecting anything. On top of that, his friendship with the local elf girl in the other world is genuinely healthy and normal, which is almost unprecedented in this genre! The lead has the basic social skills to get on well with most of the denizens of his dream life, in fact, and barely annoyed me at all until he stupidly crossed paths with a dragon and didn't seem to care that the elf girl by his side probably wasn't going to respawn the next day like he would. (Why doesn't anyone ever care about anything in this kind of show?)

Anyway, as a result of this misadventure she ends up in modern day Japan with the hero, so the pair make the best of it and hang out to enjoy the local attractions. There's still plenty of contrived lameness to be found when the focus shifts back to the real world: why did he go out blindly bra shopping for her (how would that even work?) while she sat around at home naked, and why was the only outfit he could find for her to wear a sexy, cropped sailor suit? Did nobody consider that she could simply wear some of his clothes? She looked so much like a cosplayer at that point that they may as well not have bothered to hide her ears. But this is ultimately all just an excuse to show off Japanese culture, food and locations to a local audience through the foreign perspective of a cute elf girl, so it's kind of funny that it still navigates the fantasy/isekai elements better than a lot of more serious series.

Babanba Banban Vampire ep1: A sitcom about a vampire who is watching over a teenaged boy with eager anticipation, awaiting the day he turns eighteen so that he can finally consume him. Unfortunately, the boy is just starting high school, and as the vampire has a strong preference for his meals to be virgins, it falls to him to watch over his future dinner to make sure that he doesn't make impure life choices. It's obviously problematic but also pretty funny, with unsexy male nudity at every opportunity and a refreshing disrespect for stereotypical gender roles. Everyone other than the vampire is drawn to be relatively plain-looking which makes his ethereal prettiness stand out. Weirdly, the vampire is actually Mori Ranmaru, Oda Nobunaga's famously loyal retainer, which adds extra layers of complexity to all of the nonsense. I'll give it a second episode.

R
 
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