Posts Tagged “True Tears”
May
17
2008
Harem Personality Quiz: ask your blogger what harem anime is right for you!Posted by: CCY in Analysis, tags: AIR, Analysis, Clannad, Da Capo, ef, H2O ~FitS~, Kanon, Kimi ga Nozomu Eien, KimiKiss Pure Rouge, School Days, Shuffle, sola, True Tears, Tsukihime
So you wanna watch a harem anime. Or maybe you’re just amused by my post title. In any case, the harem genre is one that enjoys a negative reputation from anime viewers, mainly due to the core nature of it being one guy surrounded by many girls waiting to jump him - rather pandering, even I will admit. Of course, such a stereotype is the same as assuming that all shonen action shows involve men in spiky hair screaming, or all shoujo romances feature blond-haired ambigously-gendered prettyboys surrounded by sparkles and flowers, or, more pertinently, that all anime is hentai. So it’s my job today to recommend some of the better harem-type shows out there with a fun little activity - and I don’t mean fun like your teacher’s definition of “fun”, trust me, so it’ll be OK. The problem with the harem genre, and the reason it has gets a bad rap from so many people is that, admittedly, it does vary wildly in quality. There are piles of pandering shows which are nothing more than the stereotype I mentioned above. But not all of them belong in this pile. Rather, many shows have a harem setup only in appearance, and belong to a greater genre I usually term the ‘visual novel’ shows, after works like Kanon or Tsukihime that were originally visual novels, that have a skewed male:female ratio for sure, but have a more refined (or at least more refined pandering to emotional fools like me) taste. So here’s a little quiz I devised on a boring weekend to help you determine which visual-novel / harem-type anime might suit you. Amuse yourself, at least to see if you’ve seen what I’ve recommended and whether it suits you or not. It’s all about what personally appeals the best in such a diverse genre like this. Enjoy! (Yeah, everything’s after the jump. Keep going…) (more…)
Apr
07
2008
True Tears, the Heroine Paradox, and the Madden Cover JinxPosted by: CCY in Series Review, True Tears, tags: Series Review, True Tears
Of course, that is all pretentious-speak for “I finished True Tears and I can’t decide whether to be angry, satisfied, or moved to tears,” but carry on. I’ve railed on True Tears a couple of times before for being decidedly normal and unchallenging. It was very good looking and did what it did very well, but it’s kind of like polishing and perfecting a text-only program when everyone had moved on to graphical ones. Nevertheless I had forgotten that games like Nethack still have their charm, and as such True Tears provides all of the emotion and pendulum drama of a good visual novel conversion. I could best sum up my conflicting emotions on the superiority of any one recent visual novel show - if you read the recent reviews you will find I waver more than Makoto Itou - by the fact that despite all being in the same rough genre (and a very rough genre at that) all four I’ve seen have quite a unique style to them. Clannad is two things at once, the ‘crying’ visual novel and the ‘funny’ visual novel. In the end I will rate True Tears as an excellent example of what to do if you have to do the same thing as everyone else. Would I watch another True Tears? Maybe, despite it all, I’m a sucker for these types of shows - but I’d prefer something with a slightly different flavor. (Series spoilers, shockingly. Also, this review heavily influenced by the excellent and comphrensive analysis by LianYL over at Riuva.)
Mar
05
2008
My Show Is Better Than Your Show, March Madness EditionPosted by: CCY in Season Review, tags: Aria, Clannad, Da Capo, Gurren Lagann, H2O ~FitS~, Kaiji, Kimi ga Nozomu Eien, KimiKiss Pure Rouge, Minami-ke, Nodame Cantabile, Sayonara Zetsubou Sensei, Season Review, Shakugan no Shana, Shugo Chara, To Heart 2, True Tears, Wangan Midnight
There seems to be cries every season about how the cropping of shows is worse than the last, and while this may or may not be true depending on your taste in shows, I’ve always found it hard to be lacking in stuff to put up on the screen every night. This is because while there may not be many standout, my-God-I-need-to-watch-this-now shows in every season there are always plentiful bounties of sleeper hits, things worth trying because someone said it was good, or just plain old shows, enough to ensure that I get continually buried deeper and deeper in a pile of anime I need to catch up on. Perhaps a large part of it is due to the fact that I enjoy being very easily influenced and thanks to that I can pick up random shows if two or three people say it’s actually pretty good - doubly so if they can nail a weak spot of mine - combined with the fact that I really haven’t seen much, having only been in the anime-watching business for just over a year. To prove that anime Is Out There - cue the X-Files theme - I’m going to spend a little time tonight going over the majority of my watchlist, instead of the huge specialty posts on a single anime which have been written recently. In case you haven’t figured it out, that’s mostly code for “I want to talk about True Tears, Clannad, and Shana II but am too lazy to unify it in an easy way” with some bonus laughing at other shows added in. Since it’s March and all and I like to pretend to be hip and knowledgable about sports (Protip: Motorsports yes, sportssports no.), it’s a super special sweet sixteen - ow, my manliness - March Madness-type organization with, you guessed it, sixteen shows on the list. There are in reality a few more but the majority of the extra would consist of “I saw this once, and would kind of keep watching it if there were nothing else to watch,” which explains itself well enough. To be fair it doesn’t have the mass-voting aspect or the actual sports-related references of the other March Madness anime posts, but, hey, 16 anime, that’s a lot. (more…)
Jan
27
2008
Track Two: True TearsPosted by: CCY in Track Two, True Tears, tags: Track Two, True Tears |



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