Supposedly there IS a part two going on in Japan (presumably for Re:Act) but I don't know if that's true. And thanks for the heads-up on the Melty Blood manga. The greatest and most overarching issue is the wildly shifting tone that precludes any of the overarching sense of tension or creeping dread that a story about kidnapped young adults playing fundamentally dangerous games should have.
To schoolboy Shiki. Searching anime order by alphabet name A to Z.
I've been curious about it! Ciel doesn't suffer much in characterization, but she shares Hisui and Kohaku's problem in that, as I recall, nothing is explained about her (and unlike with them, that's actually kind of odd here).
In short, what Tsukihime fans WANT is an adaptation. Ultimately, though...I think I prefer writing game reviews. Watch high quality anime online × × Genre. Also he is unable to remember anything well from the time before his accident. like what the anime was portraying.
Plot Summary:Shiki Tohno sustained a life threatening injury as a child, and due to that incident he was sent away from the Tohno household and was given to a relative to be raised. ChromeAlchemist:Pretty excellent review you got there, I like how the humour got progressively natural as the review went on. Tokyo Game Show is starting up as I write this (Wednesday night), and announcements streams are scheduled to go on for a few days. ― Welcome to Anime News Network Connect! Years later, when Shiki is in high school, the head of the Tohno household—his father—dies, and he is ordered to move back in by his sister Akiha, who is the new head of the household. Also there was that one time he said that maybe getting attacked/molested would teach Ayako some femininity. It's the single most disappointing aspect of this anime when you expect the huge final confrontation, vampire versus kid with eyes that see Death, the prospect that probably drew more fans of the game than anything else...and the vampire goes down like a pansy. ok you win at my third point. Second, there's a bit of direction in the final episode that I found strangely cool*. Much of the effectiveness of HF was how downright unnerving it was seeing everything you saw in the other routes get subverted in front of your eyes, people you've gotten attached to dying left and right or corrupted by the Shadow.
In any case, your analysis is smooth as are all your reviews as far as I can tell. ...oh, come back already! Please, I'll do it right this time! People in general sound fairly unnatural, and Shiki in particular is godawful to listen to; also, why oh why, can't any dub track get the right translation for "Nii-san?" Yes, I know I said my next review would be Heart de Roommate. Most of the problems come from the characterization. I'm fairly certain that's just a matter of personal preference. Memes man, memes. It's not just that things are changed. As might be guessed, the anime adaptation of Tsukihime is a bit of a contentious subject in TYPE-MOON fandom, even to the point where it's spawned an internet meme denying its existence. There's not much to comment on...which is the problem. StoryFirst and foremost, I am aware that there is a huge Type-Moon universe surrounding the Shingetsutan Tsukihime franchise and that the anime supposedly only scratches its surface. Or maybe that IS the full version. Though, in the ideal case, they'll somehow manage to throw in Kohaku's role anyway... *has bad flashbacks to Hisui's True Ending and shuts up*. True an anime would be a much easier way to get them interested, but the thing of it is, Fate Stay Night has an anime too (as do Higurashi and now Umineko but that's another group, albeit one that TYPE-MOON are friends and fans of), and it's both decent in quality and popular, thus massively increasing the chance that someone would be willing to try the visual novel, and circumventing this... thing (which, like you said, has it's moments but falls flat overall). The game-changing handheld is finally put out to pasture.