Daigo, the son of renowned baseball player Gorou Shigeno, believes he has to live up to his father's name by becoming an all-star player himself. With great dreams, as soon as he reaches fourth-grade, he promptly joins the same little league baseball team his dad played on, the Mifune Dolphins. However, things don't go as planned. After only the first couple of practices, Daigo's lack of talent and inherent baseball sense shows, and his confidence is crushed. Unable to bear the pressure of living up to his father, a baseball prodigy, he quits the team in less than a year. Two years later, now in sixth-grade, a transfer student joins Daigo's class. This student turns out to be Hikaru, the son of Gorou's lifelong friend and fellow baseball star, Toshiya Satou. One day, Daigo's mother receives a call from the Dolphins requesting players for a game, so she forces Daigo to attend. To Daigo's surprise, he finds Hikaru there. Even more shocking is that despite his father's occupation, Hikaru has never played baseball before! Unlike Daigo, though, Hikaru immediately picks up the game demonstrating excellent performance. Needless to say, Daigo and Hikaru are polar opposites of each other. But this friction will inevitably thrust both of these inexperienced children into the world their fathers cherish—the world of baseball. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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The very first scene seen in episode 01 offers enormous emotional depth when Daigo talks about his father and tells about his dreams in front of the class. The empty baseball fields at sunset work as the perfect, powerful backdrop while a soundtracks from the original series starts playing. The inability to meet the expectations set for him and the lack of natural talent required to follow his father's footsteps are the very core of his character. But he is not his father. It's time for him to be himself. When I started watching Major 2nd, I didn't expect it to hit me in the feelswith a baseball bat already in the first episode. This is the 7th season for the Major franchise, and it's nothing less than a love letter to its fans. The story is once again far from being perfect. The beginning suffers from compromises that were made in purpose of making this season watchable to a new audience that hasn't seen the original 6 while simultaneously trying to create the next generation of Major and its setup. The pacing is rather weird and jumpy, time skips happen already in very early stage. The 2nd main character introduction is random and could be called to be based on coincidences alone just to create the preferred settings for the anime itself. Basically the first 7 episodes are rather mediocre and messy, but once the beginning is left behind and the story starts advancing, we get a more consistent flow centering around the familiar things that Major has always done so successfully. The characters are fun to follow. Daigo's sister is absolutely lovely. She has clearly inherited her mother's temper. The voice acting alone makes me smile uncontrollably because the seiyuu work delivers so much personality. Especially the adult version of Shimizu has turned out fantastic. Daigo's pondering and uncertainty can be little annoying and feel filler-ish at times, but what it also did was leave more room for character development which Major 2nd relies almost as much as its predecessor. The romantic subplot plays much bigger role and the potential love interest is full of charm, much like all female characters in the series. The single best part of the cast is how there is not a single anime character in it. Anime as an adjective I mean. Everyone follows the realistic pattern where characters rely on their personalities. In one way, this is the polar opposite of let's say Kuroko no Basket where character specific skills/talents are essentially superpowers, personalities follow archetypes and character designs is based on the "spot the main character" tier fakeness. Major is downright genuine work, relying on itself and not on common tropes that create false appeal. When it comes to balance, that is certainly among the most impressive sides of this season. Every bit of drama and character centric insecurities are overcome during the baseball games where character development, character relations and sport intelligence all continue to advance. Seeing how our cast grows closer to each others while growing as persons as games advance, is the perfect example of awe-inspiring. Yet, at the same time, the matches itself exist as baseball games on the surface level, and the importance of this hasn't been forgotten. The smoothness creates a rather magnificent atmosphere that manages to make the series incredibly entertaining and offer a fresh experience. In one way, Major 2nd is nothing but light slice of life drama centering around baseball and focusing on character relations and development. It's a widely used formula in the sports genre and those who have never seen this to be anything special won't be changing their minds here either. What I see is an endless potential and Major 2nd is yet another massive success that managed to live up to its potential and offer beauty that can only be achieved under these settings.
Right at the outset, let me say this. Its Major, but don't expect the first season of Major here in '2nd'. And oh, spoilers in the review. TL;DR - Its a great anime, but if you hold high expectations of this like i did, then maybe you might be slightly disappointed. However, it's still worth the watch and i have high expectations of subsequent seasons. If you're a fan of Major, definitely go ahead and watch. If you like sports anime in general, give it a chance, see if you like it. I'm sure subsequent seasons will be really good and this might be important forthose. This season of this possibly long series basically tackles the question of how expectations might affect a second generation (third actually) of a professional athlete family. And it portrays it well. Just it's not that interesting to me. The original Major, the entire series, was a testosterone filled, action packed and at times tear jerking series about the triumphs of Goro in his journey of becoming a baseball player. The first season of it as well fits that description. It was also about establishing the motivation of Goro, the early trials that he faced like his father's death, the motivation Gibson gave him and the like, and while great in itself, it largely helped propel subsequent seasons to greater emotional heights because we knew what Goro went through. His father's death and that epic match at the end of the tournament in the first season. I came into this expecting similar things. Now when i compare that with the new MC, Daigo, and his inability to cope with expectations placed on him because of his father's success, it just didn't have the same impact. I kept expecting Daigo to come up with a cool move or show inhuman determination that made everyone acknowledge his genius and make my spine tingle and my hairs stand on end. He doesn't. The show itself doesn't. And i guess the point is, the show and he shouldn't. Those kinds of things would be at odds with the theme its trying to deal with. Major 2nd feels much more grounded. Daigo, at least for now, isn't a baseball genius. The show repeatedly pounds you with that early on. The progress he makes throughout the show in terms of skill are minor (like learning how to bunt). Even later on, he doesn't make as much of an impact on games like Goro did. Mostly it's Daigo's best friend, and Satou's son, Hikaru, who is shown to be the baseball genius that the team needs to win games. And apart from him, the emphasis is more on Daigo dealing with his inferiority complex and how the entire team contributes collectively to their, and Daigo's, success. Needless to say, that requires strong secondary characters. And often, I found myself skipping through bits of the show because the character conflict it tried to drive just fell flat for me. Most of the characters are boring. The original had Goro to single handedly lead the show. Here it understandably tries to focus on multiple characters. Multiple, underdeveloped, weak characters. And did I mention how much I find the FMC this time irritating. Uh. (A bit of an aside, Mayumura's son is voiced by the guy from Konosuba - I didn't even need to check - and the entire time I found his lines hilarious because I kept seeing him in a comedic light. Still that guy is probably the most fun character in the show for me) The show has its moments however. It shines when there are matches to be played instead of conversations. The baseball is exciting as ever which kept me watching this. We look at what a few of the characters from the earlier season are doing and the final match of the show is great as well. Its basically a second generation version of the last match Goro had while a part of Kaido. In terms of characters that is, not epicness. It pales in comparison to the last match of major's first season as well. And I say that while not exactly remembering the specifics of how that match played out. This series still has a long way to go to get to those heights. A bit of a cursory comment on the other aspects. Art is good, nothing standout, consistent throughout. Sound...hmm i don't remember much about this lol. OP is ok. The second ED is just 'Uhh!'. That was long, and I probs repeated myself more than once, thanks for reading. Here's hoping there is more baseball and badassery next season.
Honestly didn't like the first couple episodes, but it brought me in the same way the original Major did. The setting/premise for the series was perfect. Gotta admit the character growth was larger than i expected. It brought tragedy in like how the original series did, which I didn't think it would. I liked how they played that. It made us focus on other characters problems, which again followed the original series. I didn't like how when they pitched or hit, there were sparkles. Bad animation choice.But that final episode was amazing. Brought in all the feels. Overall great series if you watched the original one. And if you're new I'd say it is a good one with some weird problems. But if they follow suit and provide multiple seasons, it'll grow into something big.
The Major series was definitely the best sports anime ive ever seen in my life if not the best Anime i have watched. Just the story and character development is superb. No anime compares to this anime in terms of character development and story telling. I have the seen the first major series a long time ago so seeing a new sequel come out really made me excited. this sequel was definitely worthy to be its predecessor. Characters: Definitely the strongest point for the whole majority of the major series the character development is without a doubt the best I've seen from the characters backgroundto intense emotional cut-scenes that really make you feel bad for the character. Hopefully this season will add to that and more! Story: Major has A really amazing story line no argument its one of the best relating to sports. Overall: IF YOU HAVEN'T WATCHED THE ORIGINAL MAJOR GO WATCH IT NOW EVEN IF YOUR NOT A SPORTS FAN TRUST ME YOU WILL BE BLOWN AWAY WITH THE EMOTIONS AND THE FEELS WATCH IT NOW! DONT WATCH THIS SEASON BEFORE WATCHING THE ORIGINAL FIRST!
For reference, I watched the entirety of the original Major series from S1 to S6 in one go, including all OVAs and movies. While I consider myself a fan, I think the original series is far from perfect and suffers from consistent flaws from start to finish. One of my biggest issues with the previous show was how similar each arc was. This may be a controversial statement, but the original Major kept retreading on the same conflicts, some you even see in other baseball manga before and after its inception. Goro's development, at least to me, peaked in S2, and we've only seen micro-improvementsto Goro's skill and character since then, with the only unique issue being his yips in S6. All of this to say is that I was pleasantly surprised to see Major 2nd tread in a completely different path than the original series. Goro from the start was shown to be an incredibly talented individual with his independent goals. Daigo on the other hand is less talented and has to fight the pressure of his legacy. The combination of the two makes his journey as a character more poignant as an athlete than anything I really saw from Goro in my opinion. There's also significantly more highlighting of the side characters in Major 2nd that the original started to mostly forget, especially in later seasons of the show. Finally, Daigo is a catcher, one of the most interesting positions in baseball but one that's constantly overshadowed by most baseball manga in favor of highlighting the pitcher. This new perspective that you don't see in almost any other manga makes this a unique and fascinating read. This is not to say that Major 2nd is perfect, I think the show in particular has a weird and borderline unhealthy view of child development in how they go about encouraging baseball. While it's not really too bad in the beginning, it gets really bizarre in the final few episodes to the point where it's hard for me to wrap my head around. That being said, Major 2nd overall brings so much flavor and uniqueness using Daigo as the star of the story that Major never offered. The original Major felt like gourmet french fries. It tastes good, it's flashy, and it's well-made, but ultimately you only appreciate the first fry for so long before you just scarfing piece after piece down and it all blends together. I genuinely believe that Major 2nd is on track to be much more ambitious than that and more than any other season of Major I've seen to this day, I'm incredibly excited to see what comes next.