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Sunday, August 31, 2014

The Irregular at Magic High School: First Impressions (And my first request!)

So this was my first ever request!   Happy to give impressions.  Hit me up at the Late Night Otaku facebook page or in the comments here. So without further ado... 行くぞ!


     The Irregular at Magic High School poses a world in which magic is not only real, but technology enabled.  This was all necessary in a world in which global cooling (haha, appreciated that one) and world wars ravaged the population.  Now countries are desperately creating magicians and adapting to a world in which what you think can become reality. Sound interesting?  That is the magic of The Irregular - its setting in all its well thought out glory.

     The show opens on two siblings discussing school matters. They have been accepted into an elite Magic School.  The brother, Tatsuya Shiba, is in the lower ranking classes due to his practical exam being so low.  His sister, Miyuki Shiba, had no such bad luck.  Miyuki was accepted into class 1 - the elites. Its a hard conversation to follow.  If there is any gripes, its that the world is too big, there is so much to try to figure out.  Personally I enjoyed it.  I've only watched the first arc, and it was like reading the first novel in a series.  Detailed enough to feel out all the characters, but short enough to be enjoyable (and keep me awake all night still...). 

   
As the series progresses, we find out Tatsuya is not what he seems.  Despite of his poor magic testing marks, hes actually a hard working magical genius.  Our hero is worth his title as he solves problems by being calm, wise, hard working and just play bad ass.  Each character presented this far has a strong trait that makes them heroic, but Tatsuya is much like Wesley from The Princess Bride. He is completely over the top but likeable anyways. 

The writers play lightly on the humor - no breast grabbing tropes here.  Any humor comes from well written character dialogue.  The action runs well through out and keeps the plot moving.  The moving plot tends to leave more to ask then answered and again that just makes the series the more watchable. 

 To dig just a tad deeper, the first eight episodes dug into discrimination between Class 1- the elite magic user - and Class 2, our have nots.  While they were talking about magic, one can't help but be curious as to what our heroes actions and the resolution of this arc were actually allegory for current economic grievances.  Then again I am told I tend to look to deep.

Overall if I was to rate the series its better than entertaining.  But just a bit thus far.  While not on my list of MUST SEE's, its good thus far and if you want a series to watch its worthy.  I'll be watching for sure. 

So what do you think?  Think I missed something?  Think I got it wrong?  I'll do a full review when I finish, but in the meantime, join the conversations by commenting or at #latenightotaku.

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

No Game No Life: Review


No Game No Life Review
Bound by normal conventions we start with a basic summary... No Game No Life is an anime that follows in the footsteps of Alice in Wonderland with several important twists.  We have two protagonists of amazing abilities.  They are both geniuses with only slight divergences in skill sets  Sora, he male older brother, is incredibly smart with a knack for analyzing people.  Shiro, the sister, is beyond a genius, this once in a thousand years analytical machine.  The normal formula would have two normal people go to a mystical land and find their way; however, in No Game No Life, these two abnormal game lovers are transported by a God to a world in which everything is settled through... games. 

Humanity, called Imanity in this world, is at the bottom of the sentient and magical food chain of 16 races. They are backed into a corner and must fight their way out.  Enter our heroes, and all of a sudden humanity has a fighting chance.  Shiro and Sora decide to climb the hierarchy and challenge the god of games himself, Tet. 

Sadly the series is only 12 episodes long and therefore way to short for their dreams to victory; but as a I sad sadly.  The ride through their first few battles is well worth the watch and I'm sure I'm not the only one waiting for a second season.

Each mini arc of the 12 episodes revolve around the victory of a major challenge culminating in Sora and Shiro playing a game against their opponent.  The danger of such a set up is two fold.  Firstly, the writer has to make us believe there is a chance that they could lose - not that surprising, otherwise what's the point.  Second the solution to their victory has to be believable. The game has to be solved through something the viewer couldn't have imagined themselves while still following all the rules of the game and world.  And this is where the series gets a little weak and the message seemingly built in muddled.  The games are FUN.  The solutions are fun.  But our heroes are so over the top geniuses, that often their solutions don't feel even obtainable by normal mortals.

And that is where things fall apart for at least me...  You see the set up here is that normal boring humans are weak.  But its through this weakness that they invent, they are creative, they are more than any of the other races.  Because its necessary, because its adaptation, because its what makes us great.  We don't have physical strength and we don't have magic... we have our minds.  Sora and Shiro as our champions just don't work, because their minds are inhuman.  They are so good at what they do, on such a different level than your average mortal that this message, that humanity IS clever and creative and smart is lost because not a human exists in reality will ever be Sora and Shiro level smart. 

The art is beautiful, the fan service is there, the over the top moments in more younger audience animes are all there.  In fact, as a whole I may be asking the series to be more than it was intended.  After all, what 15 or 16 year old doesn't imagine themselves or desire to be the greatest gamer, and want to be seen as a hero for it.  And the show provides that fantasy wrapped in a beautifully rendered package tied off with laughable moments. 

So I'd have to say on a scale of I want my 6 hours back, to OH MY GOD THIS IS A MUST SEE... I'd say the series was entertaining.  I'm looking forward to them making more but I'll stick to watching it on crunchy roll - I'd probably never pay full retail to watch the series. 

What do you think?  Did I get it wrong?  You have a comment?  Then please post ^.^  Also join all of us other late night otaku at our facebook page: late night otaku or by using the hashtag #latenightotaku