Seven Mortal Sins
For better or worse, Seven Mortal Sins is the epitome of ecchi anime.
For better or worse, Seven Mortal Sins is the epitome of ecchi anime.
Grimoire of Zero simultaneously reveals the strengths and weaknesses of a short episode run.
In its fourth season, for the first time, Steven Universe has unequivocally won me over.
Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood’s portrayal of power, whether physical, alchemical or political, is rendered with real nuance.
Search Party’s really about the search for purpose in your twenties – a search that is often ludicrous, misguided and self-absorbed.
And You Thought There is Never a Girl Online? is an easy show to prejudge. Cover art focusing on an unrealistically busty young woman’s cleavage? Check. An MA15+ rating for “sexual references and nudity”? Check. An awkwardly-translated title? Check and check. Turns out I was wrong.
In its second season, Attack on Titan makes its explanations work by opening up more questions.
You know you’re onto a good thing when your primary complaint about it is that there isn’t enough of it.
I suppose this was inevitable. Adventure Time’s lustre was always going to fade for me at some point.
As my wife puts it, “This is every bad, neckbeard cliché about anime come true.”