Despite the unpromising promo videos, I may have to watch the first episode due to the cast: Kyon, Tanya, Hestia, Rizu, Megumin, Momo, Boxxo, Ruti, and even Optimus Prime.
The trailer somehow reminds me of another Pon video. Not as “animated”, of course.
Netflix remakes Shōgun. Honestly, my first cynical thought was to check to see how many characters they’d swapped the race and/or gender for.
(between badly-dubbed anime and the original mini-series, I think I can nail down the birth of my interest in Japan…)
(officially, Delicious In Dungeon)
Y’know, for such a simple setup, it requires an awful lot of exposition up front. And the food-porn exposition inevitably leads to a shouty freakout by Our Not-Eaten Mage Girl.
Verdict: if it stays this talky, I’m out. Even the tentacles looked bored.
(dungeon take-home bag is unrelated)
Okay, I was a touch bored, so…
(officially, Gushing Over Magical Girls)
Meet our cups cast: A, B, C, D, E, and F. Our Reluctantly
Villainous Heroine is C, whose firmness is immediately displayed in
her fully nude transformation scene. We only see Her Villainous
Partners in the credits this episode, but they appear to be A and F.
Our Briefly-Pure Magical Girls are B, D, and E, whose first encounter
with the new villain on the block gets them thoroughly fondled by a
summoned tentacle-gimp plant monster and then whipped so hard by
C-sama that their asses are still beet-red the next day at school.
Because of course they’re all in the same class, and we’re treated to
expository lingerie close-ups as the girls change out of their gym
clothes, plus a triple-titty transformation scene when they get the
call to action. That covers about the first half of the episode.
It seems that Our Dark Mascot was correct when he intuited that Our Heroine’s obsession with the local MG team wasn’t admiration for their successes, but subconscious sadistic enjoyment of their suffering. Which she is now in a position to consciously inflict, and which makes her feel all tingly down there.
By the way, her name’s Utena (no relation); she doesn’t seem to have a villain name yet. HiDive is apparently airing the less-censored version, which includes perky nipples and closeup crotch-shots but silences some “sound effects”; those (and more detailed imagery) will be on the Bluray.
(unlucky magical girl is unrelated)
(officially, Chained Soldier)
In which peaches produce melons, according to the end credits. Anyway, Our Future Househusband is a loser who can’t get a girl despite being well-trained in the wifely arts, until the day he wanders into an expository lump and meets the F-cups of his dreams, which are attached to a sword-swinging supergal whose power is enslaving cannon fodder. She’d never tried it on a human before, so she’s surprised when he turns into super-dog and tears through slightly-animated target dummies. This also impresses her subordinates, who consist of two DD-cups and a loli.
TL/DR: they hire him as housekeeper and combat slave, and Wacky Hijinks are sure to ensue. Despite the huge boobs and the full-body french kissing, this was pretty tedious due to the exposition, power-kanji displays, and origin flashbacks, especially compared to how far C-sama got with her victims in the previous show.
(reasonable approximation of Our Dominating Heroine)
(officially, My Instant Death Ability is So Overpowered, No One in This Other World Stands a Chance Against Me!)
In which Our Casually Evil Power Broker blows up the grownups, and Our Redheaded Twintail Leftover’s huge boobs act as life preservers. That pretty much covers it; the rest is mostly CGI, tedious exposition, and flashbacks.
(unrelated Christmas present is about the right size)
Link pushed the wrong button.
(receptionist is Best Girl in Immoral Guild; can’t imagine what made me think of this show…)
Finally!
Yeah, right there with you, Sein. New OP song isn’t as off-genre as the previous one, but still doesn’t grab me. ED song is just new lyrics for the previous song.
Verdict: mildly worried about massive cast expansion next week, but they’ve earned my trust.
Welcome to The Tutorial. We’ll be providing flashbacks, exposition, and cameos of characters you’ll learn to care about later, as well as a chance to see the consequences of poor decision-making in a dungeon.
On the bright side, despite the trailers and previews, the original Korean character names are used, which leaves me wondering if they’re producing two versions of the Japanese audio, with some lines re-recorded for the international audience. If so, I imagine they picked the Japanese names to match the lip flaps.
Verdict: showing several side characters early is a good choice, despite how random those scenes will look to people who haven’t read the source material.
(okay, I’m really just here for Esil; if they get that far…)
There are significant tone shifts in the new OP and ED, but the show itself is picking up right where it left off, with Jinshi and Maomao seeing each other a little differently.
Verdict: yes please.
(officially, Sasaki & Peeps)
They made a double-length episode that delivers an entire novel’s worth of exposition. One would hope this is so that every future episode can consist exclusively of magic, action, and cute psychic girls doing cute psychic things, but I kind of doubt it.
Verdict: he’s a magical girl and a crossworld trader and a newly-minted secret agent. And probably other things that I’m unlikely to stay awake long enough to find out.
[not to be confused with Pon-pon-pon Pon-pon-pon-pon Pon-pon]
(officially, Pon no Michi; no one’s licensed this one)
The only active torrent seems to have multi-language machine-translated subs, which offends the folks on Reddit who know something about mahjong.
The “This Is Comedy!” background music is mixed way too loud, the exterior background art is obviously just a bunch of traced photos, and the character art is only occasionally attractive, and not terribly fan-serviceable. Except in the OP/ED animations and the trailers, which apparently used up all the money.
The girls are slightly more animated than cardboard cutouts, but their giant breasts are firmly glued in place. I might have seen one blink-and-you’ll-miss-it bounce on Girl#4 as she got excited about the chance to join the cast; the rest of the breast physics are restricted to the OP/ED.
The less said about the “humorous” deformed faces and inside-baseball reference jokes, the better. And of course there’s mahjong exposition. I’m sure there will be a lot more, especially with a magical talking bird hanging around, with a very familiar voice.
Speaking of voices, I did not recognize Our Loud Speed-Reading Heroine as Miss Kuroitsu. Then again, I didn’t recognize her as Magia Magenta from Gushing, either.
(unrelated gaming girl is not this stacked in-game)
Apparently, Our Sadistic Heroine and Her Magical Playthings are officially middle-school girls. Which will come as a real shock to anyone who actually looks at them. I mean, the last time I saw a fourteen-year-old girl who was that stacked, her name was Sakura Ando [1, 2] (Ai Shinozaki was doing busty bikini work at 14, but she still had a lot of baby fat in her face, which made her look her age; Saaya Irie was of course famous for having huge boobs at 11, but it took years for the rest of her figure to catch up; Erika Yazawa’s boobs made a good living, but she was at least 15 when she bounced into Idoling!!!).
Meanwhile, the season-preview thread on the ANN forums is full of people throwing around the word “pedophilia”, with no grasp of the meaning of the word (hint: an actual pedophile would be repulsed by the sight of a teenager with the body of a Penthouse model).
One correction: I initially described the junior member of the bad-girl team as A, based on her brief appearance in the credits. Looking ahead, she’s an actual little girl who looks her age, but she doesn’t seem to get lewded. The other girls lewd overtime to make up for that.
(speaking of words that don’t mean what someone thinks they mean…)
First we’re introduced to Our Fanatical New Hero and his party, viewed through the eyes of the latest member, Mask Gal. Then the OP goes all-in on Our Brocon Heroine’s transformation from unstoppable emotionless technically-alive Chosen Hero to slow-living fan-service object, with a side-order of Tisse-service; Red and Rit are barely in it.
This season is definitely all about the girls, with Our Devoted Waifu getting more bouncing in the brief goblin fight than all four Pon-pon girls got in an entire episode. And the camera enjoys panning up and down the girls, and framing conversations with sideboob. I suppose if they’re going to hose the story again, they should at least make it easy on the eyes.
Verdict: cheesecake sampler.
(Leafa-chan would fit right in, although she’d probably have to fight the busty elf druid; preferably in a bath scene)
The trailers and OP made it look like a Dirty Pair/Bubblegum Crisis mashup, but after watching it, I’m leaning toward a Kiddy Grade trainwreck. The buddy-cop lead girls are cute, the mechsuit battles are flashy and not entirely incoherent, and it’s generally well-drawn and animated, but the slave android thing is either poorly explained or utter bullshit.
We’re shown a vast underclass of android slaves who are considered completely disposable, each one of which requires a daily shot of juice that also acts as a spiffy drug for humans and has a massive black-market value. Each android is issued (?) one shot a day, which they carry around until they need a hit, or maybe store in an unguarded locker room at work. We’re also shown a massive hijacked truckload of the stuff, which suggests that thousands of workers are going to be tossed in the garbage when they can’t get juiced tomorrow, which would surely disrupt their ability to provide a functional and safe environment on Mars.
Verdict: mysterious pasts and secret agendas, sigh.
(Our Low-Affect Transforming Heroine would be more interesting if her mechsuit looked like this)
I decided to see how they’d follow up the I Can’t Believe It’s Not Hentai debut, and it opens with all three magical girls completely naked. Subtle, it ain’t.
(Our Increasingly Aroused Villainess wishes her costume were this conservative…)
Netflix has a full-length trailer for their production of 3 Body Problem, which is filled with scenes that have nothing to do with the book. The only two skiffy technologies present in the first book are something capable of projecting strings onto an individual’s field of vision (countdowns and childish insults), and a monomolecular cable capable of slicing a ship in half as it passes through the Panama Canal. The former is allegedly alien tech, the latter is the main character’s tech. Not the main character of the show; that seems to be Benedict Wong playing the gruff middle-aged detective.
If they never explain anything (especially The Two Protons), then it might succeed as a visually spectacular shallow SciFi experience. If they do, then it’s just another chapter in the ongoing pity fuck for Chinese SF fans who can’t get their hands on the good stuff.
Every contract recruiter in India is now calling me from phony US VoIP numbers, with really bad connections. After being informed that I wasn’t interested in contract work, as he should have known from my profile, one of them even had his manager call back to explain that it was a long-term contract, and that the company typically converted to perm.
Anyway, my phone is once again set to send unknown callers straight to voicemail.
Everything else is just filler.
Note to fan-artists: they only blot out half the sky.
Cast expansion was relatively light this week, with only a few of the exam candidates getting fleshed out. This included the cute redhead in hot pants, who got some actual fan-service poses in. Nice cameos by Kraft and the old gang.
Verdict: the art style doesn’t really lend itself to fan-service; fortunately that’s not the point.
This week, the highlight is the OP animation and original song, on which they spent more money than the rest of the show. The actual episode settles into its tropes, accomplishing very little in the way of making the characters interesting. Also, SHOUTING IS COMEDY!
Verdict: snore. Maybe they should add a dramatic countdown timer, “days until Falin is fewmets”.
[not licensed for streaming]
In which Girl#4 does-not-bounce into the story, which is pretty impressive for a gal packing a pair of Death Stars. You can understand why she’s reluctant to visit other mahjong parlors with mostly male customers:
It seems a bit bait-and-switchy to make a fuss about how the OP song features a former member of Nogizaka 46 and current professional mahjong player, when her voice is so distorted by autotune that she barely sounds human. Nothing wrong with the tune, or the pon-pon girls singing the pon-pon parts, but it’s pretty clear that Kana Nakada’s career was never based on her vocal talents.
Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
Verdict: the trailers promised bikinis; maybe that’s what they’re saving the 2D animation budget for. (the 3D budget is going into rendering the automated game table)
In which Maomao schools the consorts with detailed training materials in a hilarious “do as I say, not as I do” montage. Then it’s time to reunite with another of her useful contacts to kickstart another mystery.
Verdict: Gyokuyo is Best Girl. Naughty naughty best girl.
In which we get a full recap of the history that was introduced last week, and Our Weakest Hero manages to figure out the clues in time to save, well, not everybody, but at least the girl. Next week, the story begins.
Verdict: this is paced for a faithful adaptation, which I think would require at least four seasons, and they haven’t mentioned approval for even a second one yet.
(…which means we probably won’t see Esil this season)
The OP song (“My Dream Girls”) for Molesting Magical Girls is all sweetness and light.
Please quit with the phony tracking IDs. You’ve got a package that’s supposed to arrive “today by 8 PM” that was allegedly shipped via UPS, but the tracking ID isn’t even valid in their system. I’m willing to wager that when/if it does eventually arrive, that will not be the ID on the package, and the shipping label won’t say UPS.
…and after 9 PM it updated to claim “now expected by January 24”, with the possibility to request a refund on the 25th. Meanwhile, the product page claims that I could buy one in the next hour and have it on the 20th.
Our Passionate Elf’s stirring defense of Our Slow-Waifing Hero sounds an awful lot like a confession. Just sayin’. Meanwhile, Our Adorable Assassinette’s mind is blown by Our Heroic Little Sister’s bro-sharing plans, revealed as part of the hot-springs fan-service competition. Oh, yeah, they also fight a big monster and feed some friendly giants.
Verdict: more bathing, please.
(and if they need a new product line, they can bottle the used hot-springs water and sell it to every man in Zoltan)
I have to respect them for committing to the premise. And if the Bluray release is any more explicit than this, they should ship it with a box of tissues.
Verdict: Kiwi-chan’s quite the showoff; I wonder if Venalita took a few pictures before recruiting her…
(there actually is some fan-art for the manga this is based on, but most of it is still quite suggestive, which shouldn’t surprise anyone)
In which We Suck At Undercover. Like, Really Bad.
Also, the fight music is over-the-top goofy melodrama.
Verdict: definite Kiddy Grade trainwreck vibes here. Cute gals, though.
(unrelated Night Stalker is hotter than Kolchak)
Little Miss Fan-Service is an awkward fit for this show. Fun to look at, sure, and more developed as a character than the other mages whose names I don’t even bother trying to remember, but still just a distraction from Frieren’s accidental mentoring and memories.
Verdict: I’m thinking Twintailed Redhead Hot Pants Mage should be this year’s trend. Just get us out of this forest soon, please.
Y’know, if they’d animated this, they might have convinced someone to
license it. Then again, it would still just be cute girls doing cute
things making lame mahjong references. Seriously, if these chicks
were D&D nerds, they’d be saying things like “wow, you really rolled
a natural 20 on this curry!”.
Unrelated, Izumi was clearly switched at birth. At least Nashiko is the same species as her mom, but as for the closest thing we have to a fan-service gal, the apple fell very far from the pine tree.
Verdict: the primary virtue of this is that it’s inoffensive. No shouting, no cheat powers, no slave harem, etc. It’s just filler, the sort of thing that Steven would raid for screenshots at the end of the season.
In which I think I’m done here.
It arrived Friday, from UPS, but since Amazon just threw it into an envelope, the product’s lightweight unsealed box was crushed and everything fell out into the envelope. Maybe it works, maybe it doesn’t.
Monocle Guy has stopped lurking and started getting vaguely sinister. Meanwhile, Maomao plays Detective Pukeatchu and somehow manages to locate the unlabeled jar that contains the evidence; I presume it glowed when she moused over it.
Verdict: Jinshi’s inability to cope with being friendzoned is always amusing.
I keep getting distracted by the razor sharp chins, but on the bright side, they’re giving the girls more coverage. Which is more interesting than Our Newbie Player’s discovery of how to handle status screens, skill points, and Daily Quests. Spoiler alert: Int is his dump stat.
Verdict: the rules require that we grind through this.
In which Our Bountiful Waifu is eating for three, Our Neighbor’s Wife is working up a sweat, Our Haven’t-Seen-In-Forever Guild Girl remains competitive, Our Friendly High Elf Maiden is sticking around, Our Almost-Forgotten Muscle Dude returns, Our Masked Assistant has an unsurprising secret identity, and Our Observant Assassin is the only one to notice that something’s up.
Verdict: I think I want a spinoff show in which Tisse leads hot-springs tours for the rest of the female cast.
The “Inspired by your digital shopping trends” section consists primarily of dead-tree editions of books I already purchased as ebooks. From you. Why do you think that’s a thing?
You know how Japanese men’s mags put luscious 19-year-olds in (and out of) schoolgirl outfits? Well, that reference art is clearly how the artists responsible for Our Supposedly-Fourteen Ditzy Drill-Haired Redheaded Magical Girl’s appearance this week got their inspiration. Honestly, Sulfur’s about the only member of the cast so far who could plausibly pass for under 18.
Despite the bound and bountiful cheesecake on display this week, there’s all sorts of plot crumbs being dropped. Next week, Team Dom adds a loli.
Verdict: in the words of Donna Barr, “anyone who takes this seriously deserves to”.
Oh, look, the bus people are back! Maybe I should have remembered their names! Or not. There’s no combat this week, just a history lesson and a bunch of random plot coupons, and a sauna scene that doesn’t even offer the hope of an unsteamed Bluray release.
Verdict: yawn; all the shallow Nean allegory is really turning me off of this show.
They’re trying really hard to make us care about these new mages. It’s not working for me, and they didn’t even compensate with intimate close-up shots of Little Miss Fan-Service. Sure, it was nice to see Fern casually taking down two experienced combat mages, but then we had to sit through the exposition on why they’re pursuing this certification in the first place. Which sounds a tad suspicious.
Verdict: please burn down the forest in the first minute of the next episode.
Sherlock Maomao returns to solve a locked room drawer mystery, and
gently hints that maybe you don’t want to sniff lead solder in rooms
without ventilation. While she’s got her Great Detective hat on, she
also figures out a small piece of the larger puzzle. Pity she’s not in
the room when Creepy Monocle Guy drops a hint the size of a small
boulder, which somehow zooms right past Jinshi.
Verdict: this is pulling ahead of Frieren by the simple virtue of not getting bogged down in a tournament arc, despite the extremely contrived nature of the mystery metal mystery.
(next week, slumming with the common folk!)
This week, it’s Baby’s First Dungeon Grind, as Our Hero explores his menus and spends skill points to Grow Stronger, expositing all the while. The payoff is that an evening of leveling up gives him the power to save his not-girlfriend while remaining safely anonymous.
Verdict: 1/3 of the way through the season, and he’s finished the starter area. Will they get a second season that rewards the viewers for their investment? I hope so, because I want to see Esil animated.
(not this not-girlfriend; this one’s a self-rescuing princess, for the most part)
In which the online game that’s sponsoring this show is prominently featured, with Our Bounceless Pon Girls playing online mahjong while sitting at a mahjong table together. On the bright side, they spend most of the episode actually playing mahjong, which is theoretically the theme of the show. Not that I know anything about the game, which makes the exaggerated dramatic moments zoom right past me. Speaking of drama, the episode ends with Girl#5 successfully stalking Our Poor Little Riiche Girl to the parlor. Fortunately she’s qualified to join the group, and by that I mean stacked. Also apparently homeless.
Note that the online game is getting its own anime in April, which is apparently its second season.
Verdict: if only the girls were, y’know, animated; and they stopped doing the man-face jokes; and they cut the volume on the This Is Comedy music.
In which both the OP and the ED are omitted to make room for three bathing scenes (steam and soap say: “buy the Bluray”), and with the exception of a short bit highlighting that the new Hero is a psychotic loon working for an ambitious cardinal, the story is A Day In The Slow Life for Our Girls Gone Mild. Followed by A Night In The Old Life, which leads to some nice character development for Our First Friend.
Ruti is adorably awkward at normal life, but she’s trying really hard. I particularly appreciate that Tisse manages to navigate the day without the writers resorting to Shouting Is Comedy. Instead, they actually put in the effort to make it warm and funny.
Verdict: Best. Episode. Yet.
Just spotted in a job posting:
Competitive pay up to $[highest pay] per hour
Just got a phone call from someone claiming to be Amazon Customer Support, trying to confirm recent purchases. This was suspicious not because of his random phone number and strong Indian accent, but because he claimed to be Amazon Customer Support, a group that is slightly less mythical than the Easter Bunny.
I asked him what the email address associated with this Amazon account was, and he carefully spelled out “outdoorlimited@…”.
So I hung up, changed my password at Outdoor Limited, and contacted their customer service to let them know they’d been hacked.
...and another one today. Oddly enough, they hung up before I could.