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Apr 6, 2025
AiPri is the first Pretty series I've watched. I had high hopes for it after how much good I've heard about other installments of the franchise, but I'm afraid AiPri was not a very good introduction to the franchise.
AiPri is fun but completely devoid of any substance. It's a series I didn't mind watching one episode every week but if I had 51 episodes to watch at my own pace I don't think I would've finished it because there's much better ways to spend the time it takes to watch 51 episodes of AiPri.
The best thing about AiPri is its characters, or more specifically its
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supporting cast. There are a lot of characters, and though most of them only get one focus episode and are then relegated to just background characters, I think it's great how nearly every background character in AiPri is someone with a name and a face. It makes the academy feel very alive when there are barely any "NPCs" inhabiting it. I especially liked the character Chii, who also initially started as a one-off character but unlike most characters in her role, she ended up becoming a recurring character who brought a lot of comedy to the series, and even had a pretty great character arc throughout the series.
The same unfortunately can not be said for the main trio: Himari, Mitsuki and Tsumugi. I don't think they're bad characters by any means, but their character arcs are very weak. They do not develop much until the end of the series, which makes following them for 51 episodes a tad boring, but that makes all the episodes introducing new classmates more interesting because they do have actual stories to them (even if said story is only one episode)
Now if that's all AiPri was, I would recommend it, as it would be more or less similar to what Aikatsu was like, but the thing that kills AiPri for me is its story and its absurd number of episodes that are just compilations of old songs. AiPri doesn't have much story, it's mostly just fluff and standalone episodes, which I'd be fine with. But when AiPri eventually does try to have a story, said story is bad. It feels very forced and nonsensical, and it feels like the writers just wanted to have some kind of conflict at the end of the season but they didn't think it through at all.
I haven't counted how many recap episodes AiPri has, but I am fairly confident in saying this is the most amount of recap episodes I've ever seen in an anime. There are so many episodes that have no story at all and are just Himari commenting over songs we've already seen. It really feels like either the writers didn't have enough ideas for 51 episodes or there were production issues that forced them to frequently take a break as they prepare the next episode. Whichever is the case, it doesn't make me too hopeful for the second seasons if it's going to be another 50 episodes (but I will be watching that second season either way).
As for the music, it's mostly good. The standouts for me are the first ED as well as Chii's and Quartet Star's songs. You're going to be hearing every song several times, but despite ho many times you hear them some songs are simply more forgettable than others. Though there are no songs that I outright dislike.
Overall AiPri is not a show I can really recommend. There's enough good here that I enjoyed watching it every week for a whole year, but there isn't enough fun here to warrant watching 51 episodes all the way from the beginning.
Reviewer’s Rating: 6
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Mar 25, 2023
If you have not played Trails of Cold Steel (Sen no Kiseki) 1 and 2 don't even bother watching this anime. This is not an adaptation of the games' story meant to get new fans into the franchise, this is an original side story to the games and expects you to know the story of at least the first two Cold Steel games (but it has references to every Trails game, not just Cold Steel)
If you are a fan of the games like I am you're probably going to end up watching the anime regardless of what I say, making this review kind of redundant,
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but aside from finally getting to see North Ambria after hearing about it for 12 games, this anime doesn't add anything of value to the overall story of Trails and simply isn't worth watching.
As the anime's name implies, this is the story of the North Ambrian war that happened between Trails of Cold Steel 2 and 3. However rather than focusing on the war itself this anime spends most of its run time developing its characters and simply foreshadowing the upcoming war (this is still Trails after all and it's paced exactly like the games).
So instead of the war, the story follows our 4 main characters as they travel to Erebonia to search for information about Rean, and I honestly liked those episodes quite a lot. The cast has a good dynamic with each other and it's cute seeing the culture shock they experience as they explore Erebonia's big cities since they're all from the poor countrysides of North Ambria. Add in a few cameos from different game characters and you have a pretty strong beginning that, despite being essentially filler, makes you like the characters and get invested in their anxities about the upcoming war. But that all changes when they leave back to North Ambria and the actual plot of the Northern War gets going. The actual plot is rushed and convoluted, and even the events that are specifically mentioned in Cold Steel 3 happen so fast that if you haven't already heard what happened there by playing Cold Steel 3 I wonder if you'd even understand their significance.
This sereis needed more than 12 episodes if they were going to spend half of its episodes touring Erebonia instead of progressing the plot, because as fun as their Erebonian tour was to watch, it's because the show spent so long on that tour that the main plot of the show simply does not have enough time to develop.
The art and animation are also quite frankly terrible. The whole show looks incredibly cheap but I could forgive that if the animation was good to compensate for the cheap art, but no, even the animation is cheap. The animation is so cheap that in episode 3 there's a fight scene against the episode's villain that happens entirely outside of the screen as you just hear the sound effects but don't get to see anything. And while that is the lowest point of the show's animation, the highest points really aren't much better.
Ultimately I'm not sure what the point of this anime is. It's clearly not meant for helping new fans get into the series because it just does not explain its setting or any of the concepts, so new fans would be completely lost. But for old fans there really isn't much to offer. You already know how the war is going to end because you've heard about it in Cold Steel 3, and that wouldn't be bad if the anime was great on its own, but it really isn't.
I can only recommend this to Trails megafans like myself who obsess over everything Trails and want to finally see what North Ambria is like after hearing about it for 12 games, but if you're a Trails megafan like myself you're most likely going to watch this regardless of what I have to say in this review.
Reviewer’s Rating: 4
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Dec 23, 2022
Legend of Mana is an amazing video game. However it is also a very unconventional game, where instead of following a linear story, it consists of multiple unrelated side quests that you complete in a mostly non-linear order. Eventually some of these side quests start to form into three distinct branches: the Jumi arc, the Faerie arc and the Dragon arc, and these three arcs form the core of the game's story.
When the anime was announced I couldn't help but wonder, how on earth are they going to turn such a non-linear game into an anime? I love Legend of Mana's story for its non-linearity
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and seeing how everything eventually connects to each other, so turning it into an anime with a linear story would completely remove a huge part of what made the game so special for me.
Not only that, but anime and video games are very different mediums, and even for a linear video game story, adapting it into an anime is extremely difficult. If you simply adapt a video game directly to anime you are going to end up with a complete mess, a good adaptation of a video game needs to take as many liberties as possible to fit into the different medium. The solution the anime's staff came up with was to only adapt the Jumi storyline (hence the subtitle The Teardrop Crystal) and ignore every quest that's not directly related to it. Cutting out huge portions of a game's story and only adapting one arc of it sounds like it would be a bad idea, but as I said, it's important for video game adaptations to take as many liberties as possible, and maybe only adapting the Jumi arc is the best way to go if you want to turn Legend of Mana into an anime. If the anime staff knows what they're doing then this could turn into something really special.
The anime staff didn't know what they're doing.
Even after cutting out the vast majority of the game's story and characters, The Teardrop Crystal's attempt at turning this into a linear story is mediocre at best. I liked the story of the Jumi arc a lot in the game, but when you remove all the other smaller stories surrounding it and turn the Jumi arc into the central story of a 12 episode anime, it really starts to show its weakness. The beauty of Legend of Mana is how alive the world feels, no singular story is the main focus of the game and instead there is always something small going on for you to discover. And by only focusing on one of those stories, The Teardrop Crystal fails to make the world feel so alive. The magic that made Legend of Mana feel so special is completely gone, and in its place is simply another fantasy story that has nothing unique to offer.
Though one thing I will praise the anime for is that it does turn the game's two silent protagonists (Shiloh and Seraphina) into actual characters, and has quite a lot of anime original scenes to give the main characters some backstory and development. In the game you select one of two different protagonists at the start, and the one you didn't choose simply won't exist in the story, so the anime actually having both characters in the story interacting with each other is a nice addition I wasn't expecting. They could've done it the easy way and simply had Shiloh as the only protagonist, but they did some pretty interesting things with the anime original scenes involving Seraphina (especially at the end of the series) and it helps the anime stand out on its own a little bit compared to the original game.
I do honestly feel my score might be a little harsh because it's not like The Teardrop Crystal is straight up bad, if you know nothing about the original game then you might enjoy this anime a lot more than I did, but I simply don't think it's worth watching when the game exists and is so much better in almost every regard (the one point I will give the anime over the game is Shiloh's and Seraphina's character arcs). The Teardrop Crystal takes a really interesting and unique game, but doesn't really try to do anything with the game's interesting and unique aspects when adapting it into a different medium. And that really makes me wonder, out of every possible game Square has ever made, why on earth did they choose to adapt Legend of Mana? There's so many other games in Square's huge library that would've been much easier to adapt, but instead they chose to adapt Legend of Mana. It's such a bizarre choice that you'd think they must have some kind of master plan for turning the game into an anime, but they didn't. I really can't help but wonder how this project was ever even greenlit.
But if anything at all about Legend of Mana sounds interesting to you, the original game was remastered in 2021 for PC, PS4 and Nintendo Switch, and I highly recommend you give that a try. It's a very unconventional game and its mechanics might take some time to get used to, but it is a very special game and I promise you it's much more worth your time than this anime.
Though one last point I think is worth noting is that the anime doesn't cover the actual ending of the game, which makes me believe the anime staff also has plans to eventually adapt the Faerie and Dragon arcs too. And I think there's some potential in the idea of adapting all three arcs as separate seasons of anime, but with the way the Jumi arc turned out here, I am not looking forward to seeing how they're going to handle the other two arcs.
Reviewer’s Rating: 4
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