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Pandora Hearts, Volume 7 by Jun Mochizuki
Pandora Hearts, Volume 7 by Jun Mochizuki







Pandora Hearts, Volume 7 by Jun Mochizuki Pandora Hearts, Volume 7 by Jun Mochizuki

For most of the two seasons it follows the manga closely enough to be near-interchangeable, but only gets about halfway through the story. Presumably some fanficcer somewhere has corrected this. And Xerxes Break should have won his princess (and she him.) They'd certainly earned each other. Vincent Nightray should have died in a fire, frankly. But I figured I'd miss too much set-up.Īlso, the narrative rewards at the end were not well-distributed. I was toward the middle tempted to start treating it all as I had War and Peace as a young reader, paging through to pick up Pierre's scenes and just reading them, which turned that tome into something much more manageable. The one character who very much wasn't an idiot spent half his time pretending to be, but I nonetheless plowed through all 24 volumes (22, as it turned out) in pursuit of his story. Pretty much all of the characters, protag and antag, were idiots, doing idiot things (granted usually with inadequate information) to advance the plot at a suitable clip. Shall leave descriptions of set-up and plot to other reviewers. As such, we've updated this list of anime that have inspired the shonen Dark Trio.OK, the week I was recovering from surgery on a really generous prescription for narcotic pain relievers was possibly not the optimum one for tacking this series. The 2020s, however, are likely to see a rapid rise in dark anime series. Updated on April 21st, 2023 by Ajay Aravind: Early anime movies like Akira introduced a hefty dose of darkness into the medium, but most shows steered clear of visceral and gruesome topics for the longest time. It can be argued that these dark series from the past served as inspirations for the current shonen "Dark Trio." That said, anime has always had a dark side, and this uprising of mature, fierce shonen is part of a long-lasting trend. These new shonen series are distinctively more violent and brutal than their predecessors. RELATED: 9 Things That Prove Shonen Doesn't Need Another Big Three The likes of Bleach, One Piece, and Naruto, the "Big Three" of the previous generation, were inevitably overtaken by the so-called "Dark Trio" - Chainsaw Man, Jujutsu Kaisen, and Hell's Paradise. The current anime scene is experiencing a tremendous rise in darker, grittier series, gradually replacing the conventionally tame and kid-friendly shonen genre.









Pandora Hearts, Volume 7 by Jun Mochizuki