Hi! Thank you for taking the time to read my review ♥️I don’t think the problem was that season 3 existed..it’s…
You know, but you call the Overlord the Joker. It happens. Is Banda line as a joker weak? He literally turned the Borderlands into his playground. Well...
"...we got these quick emotional glimpses into each character’s background, but somehow it felt too late..." This game wasn't meant to create any kind of emotional connection with the viewer. It was meant to show how terrible the game is. It's there to make sure the characters' actions don't seem illogical. You can dislike them, but you have to understand why they act the way they do. Therefore, "it's too late..." is not appropriate here.
But you must admit, trauma affects a person's character. So she couldn't be herself. Usagi thought she would meet her father (she didn't remember what the Borderland was like). Sick people are easy to manipulate. Already in the Borderland, she remembered everything. And realized how stupid she had been. So everything is justified. . . . . What do you think? . . .
Hi! Thank you for taking the time to read my review ♥️I don’t think the problem was that season 3 existed..it’s…
The Overlord was not a joker. The Joker was Banda (it was clear). The Overlord was himself. Obviously he is the owner of these lands. It's all perfectly logical. That's why I don't understand your attitude toward him.
Usagi suffered from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. This is well-drawn and was well observed in the first episode. Obviously, she will be different from her healthy self in 1-2 seasons. It would be strange if it were otherwise. . What do you think? . . .
. . Emotional connection with new characters? Possibly, but I don't think it was necessary. The season was focused on games. There were more games per episode here than in the first two seasons. And the characters are just unfortunate people who desperately fought for life.
Great review! Very well described. . It seems to me that your attitude towards the season is obviously biased. I bet you started watching it thinking, "Why the hell do I need this?" . At least my attitude towards the series was also biased. The manga ended with the second season. It seems like there's no need for a third season. But what was missing from the second season were the border overlord. This brings to mind that they had three seasons planned from the very beginning.
They took a long time to film it because Kento is a very busy actor. He is simultaneously filming several very complex projects. And Tao was also pregnant. The director was also busy with another project, which he was filming at the same time. Filming resumed when the three of them were free.
But because of the long absence, I think people felt like the third season was just tacked on to the first two. But this is not true. They originally planned for three seasons.
So I decided to just think and not be biased. If you initially have a negative attitude towards something, then your perception of it will be distorted.
The most important thing is to preserve the essence of the original. They made the final scene from the manga even better.
3rd season has so many unanswered question1. The Group who recruits the professor in the real world knows about…
1. Yes, they know. It's obvious 2. He didn't go anywhere. He, too, became a face card. 3. He's completely different! 4. lol human factor You just need to watch the games in Alice carefully.
What I love about jbl is they use dark skin actors. So unlike Thai bl where actors have to go through whitening…
Because there is no cult of beauty in Japan. In Japan, you don't have to conform to made-up beauty standards to be successful. That's why artists have different skin tones, different (sometimes not ideal) appearances, and so on...
so basically, everything starts when somebody is between life and death, if they survived the games they will…
The games are only in the Borderlands. This is how the soul fights to survive in the real world. They only die in the real world. If you're a person who dies in the Borderlands, you're dying in real life.
If you're a citizen of the Borderlands and you die in the Borderlands (like all the face cards in the second season), then you cross over to the other side.
Ryuuji was looking for a "bridge". Technically, they would have been together if they had crossed the bridge. They would die in the real world, but they would be together on the other side of the bridge. But in a different world. In that other world, the rules are completely different. For Ryuji, it was all just theory; he wanted to see it with his own eyes.
I don't understand how he can be part of the yakuza when he cries at every turn and calls Mitsuo to handle things…
Because he's a litter. Yakuza has many structures. They use different people for different purposes. Different types of criminals are brought there, and then they are sorted.
Is Banda line as a joker weak? He literally turned the Borderlands into his playground. Well...
"...we got these quick emotional glimpses into each character’s background, but somehow it felt too late..." This game wasn't meant to create any kind of emotional connection with the viewer. It was meant to show how terrible the game is. It's there to make sure the characters' actions don't seem illogical. You can dislike them, but you have to understand why they act the way they do. Therefore, "it's too late..." is not appropriate here.
But you must admit, trauma affects a person's character. So she couldn't be herself. Usagi thought she would meet her father (she didn't remember what the Borderland was like). Sick people are easy to manipulate. Already in the Borderland, she remembered everything. And realized how stupid she had been. So everything is justified.
.
.
.
.
What do you think?
.
.
.
The Overlord was himself. Obviously he is the owner of these lands. It's all perfectly logical. That's why I don't understand your attitude toward him.
Usagi suffered from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. This is well-drawn and was well observed in the first episode. Obviously, she will be different from her healthy self in 1-2 seasons. It would be strange if it were otherwise.
.
What do you think?
.
.
.
.
.
Emotional connection with new characters? Possibly, but I don't think it was necessary. The season was focused on games. There were more games per episode here than in the first two seasons. And the characters are just unfortunate people who desperately fought for life.
.
It seems to me that your attitude towards the season is obviously biased. I bet you started watching it thinking, "Why the hell do I need this?" . At least my attitude towards the series was also biased. The manga ended with the second season. It seems like there's no need for a third season. But what was missing from the second season were the border overlord. This brings to mind that they had three seasons planned from the very beginning.
They took a long time to film it because Kento is a very busy actor. He is simultaneously filming several very complex projects. And Tao was also pregnant. The director was also busy with another project, which he was filming at the same time. Filming resumed when the three of them were free.
But because of the long absence, I think people felt like the third season was just tacked on to the first two. But this is not true. They originally planned for three seasons.
So I decided to just think and not be biased. If you initially have a negative attitude towards something, then your perception of it will be distorted.
The most important thing is to preserve the essence of the original. They made the final scene from the manga even better.
Well... Take a "yes" from me
2. He didn't go anywhere. He, too, became a face card.
3. He's completely different!
4. lol human factor
You just need to watch the games in Alice carefully.
And for them, any find, in their opinion, ruins the entire season. Thats all
Sorry for my English
If you're a person who dies in the Borderlands, you're dying in real life.
If you're a citizen of the Borderlands and you die in the Borderlands (like all the face cards in the second season), then you cross over to the other side.
Ryuuji was looking for a "bridge". Technically, they would have been together if they had crossed the bridge. They would die in the real world, but they would be together on the other side of the bridge. But in a different world. In that other world, the rules are completely different. For Ryuji, it was all just theory; he wanted to see it with his own eyes.
Yakuza has many structures. They use different people for different purposes.
Different types of criminals are brought there, and then they are sorted.