If you've ever thought about dipping your toe into the world of visual novels, you can check out Steins;Gate's source material, which is arguably better than the anime, on PC through the It's still a good anime but it could have been great, hence it's placing. The bond between three kids; the talented Kazuya, his lazy do-nothing brother Tatsuya and their childhood friend, the adoring Minami. You would have expected this anime to focus on the blindness, but it didn’t.Instead, it focuses on the story where Takuma meets seven new girls in the village which is his new home and tries to help one of them. But this mirage of infinite ecstasy prevents Yuki from being able to grasp what’s actually happening around her. Jim Hawkins, a thirteen-year-old boy in the eighteenth century, runs the Admiral Benbow Inn with his mother since his father died. The similarities between the two are plenty, it shouldn't come as a surprise as both anime were made largely be the same team. Here she comes across an “Auto Memory Doll”, an assistant that writes down people’s thoughts and feelings. The sad anime has a lot of feels to it, which makes it really good to watch for anyone looking for that kind of a show.Yorito Morimiya loves taking pictures of the sunset, sunrises, and clouds in the sky. Being a movie that doesn’t really have tragic moments but will for sure pull on your heartstrings.A chance meeting with a puzzling girl, Amamiya Yuuko, forever changes the life of Himura Yuu, a studious young man bent on academic excellence at the Otowa Academy. If yes then watch this. While both have weak episodes I felt Trigun had more and I was bitterly disappointed with its ending.
My only complaints are with the slow early episodes and some slight issues with character design. Set in 1955, the anime follows the story of seven teenagers locked in a reformatory, waiting for a ray of light in a daily hell of suffering and humiliation, focusing especially on how they faced the life once regained freedom.A group of deliquents tossed into a grim disciplinary school in post WW2 Japan, well this anime certainly has a different setting. However, if you are able to withstand the character introductions for about 6-8 episodes, then you will be alright. Sora, a young girl from Japan, comes to America in search of her dream.

Since then, it was their mother, Trisha Elric who raised them. Certainly one those anime that falls under the genre of "must see", it's a solid series and you won't regret watching this.

That's exactly what this is, surprisingly though it's quiet good. This anime is brilliantly directed by the great Osamu Dezaki, he allows the classic novel this is based on to be fully realised as an anime adaptation. Each season of Jojo constantly reinvents itself, as it follows the lineage of the Joestar family, each scion of which has a name that can be conveniently reduced to the eponymous Jojo moniker. Lets just say after a certain character left this series and was replaced with two mediocre characters, the show went greatly downhill. In an age where the strong rule over the weak, the survivors of the fallout struggle over the ... Fist Of The North Star= Everything Dragonball wishes it was, FOTNS summed up is an epic, exceptionally violent battle shounen. Here he meets Lala-Ru, a girl with blue-hair wearing a strange pendant. If so Planetes is not for you. With Yuuri Wakasa as the president of the club, the club consists of the sturdy Kurumi Ebisuzawa; the grown-up junior Miki Naoki; the supervising teacher Megumi Sakura; and the club’s very own dog Taroumaru. Who could overlook an anime teaming with pirates that include the notorious Long John Silver. It's fine to joke about Goku and his foes spending entire episodes charging up their ultimate attacks, and maybe that isn't for everyone, but that's what the official abridged version