In a society of people with animal characteristics, Belle Lablac stands out as the only person with no animal features at all. Curious of her origins, Belle leaves her hometown and heads to the city of Schubertland to be awarded the status of Nomad by Schubertland's ruler, King Rawhide. Through the journey, she is trained by the legendary swordsman Sian Lablac. Unfortunately for Belle, through a complication, she is unable to hurt others with her legendary sword Runding. The only choice to best her opponents in battle now is to break their swords, which is heavily looked down upon. Though ostracized for her appearance and hated for her disregard of societal norms, Belle stays resolute as she sets off on a perilous journey to find her rightful place in the world. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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Bye Bye, Earth - Is going back to the early days of fantasy a good thing, or just a case of complicated feelings? I'm honestly on the edge of both sides. If you know your AniManga knowledge well, there're a few well-notable names in the industry, and that happens to be the place where one famed novelist by the name of Tow Ubukata, resides. The man who's best known for works like Summer 2004's Soukyuu no Fafner a.k.a Fafner in the Azure: Dead Aggressor, and Summer 2006's Le Chevalier d'Eon, he was truly one of the pioneers of the fantasy genre (before mid-2010s Isekai would seepinto it and tarnish its reputation forever). Even within the same period, Tow Ubukata is sadly not the same genre-defying person with complete misses on the sequels of Psycho-Pass (from Season 2 onwards), not to mention just recently with RWBY: Ice Queendom back in Summer 2022. With that said, a change of pace looking back into Tow Ubukata's early years, being in yet another prominent Summer season with one of his early novels of 2000's 2-volume long Bye Bye, Earth (not counting the new edition written between 2007-2008 at 4 volumes long), you can tell that this is where he got his start into the anime industry as a prominent novelist. But the critical question is: does the series, which is now close to a silver anniversary (24 years to be exact), fit the stranglehold that traditional fantasy works like this will be remembered in time to come? I don't really think so...or so that I'd like to assume at face value. Written as a traditional fantasy (though it has the Isekai feel), the MC lives in a world of anthropomorphic animals as the only human without a past, and that immediately sells the fact that being an outlier creates an easy target to be bullied towards. That's Belle Lablac, in a nutshell, who finds herself in that exact word where no one can understand her except her only guardian of cat/wolf man Sian, being a "Faceless", who teaches her the art of swordfighting sorcery from an early age as a way to survive in an unknown world. And that's her only language of survival, as she wants to know the origin of her roots, and also to find other humans like her who could be around in faraway lands to tell her that she's not alone being the only insane person. Armed with the sword that chose her, Runding is quite the enormous sword that no anthropomorphic animal could ever hope to wield (being like Excalibur, the Sword in the Stone that chooses its rightful owner), Belle sets off for the adventure of a lifetime, seeking the secrets that she does not know about herself and the world around her. Right out of the gate, the show taking on the novel approach of "show, don't tell" is immediately apparent as things are moving at a rather fast pace without letting the audience know of its methodical approach to a simple plot such as this, and WILL definitely be the make-or-break approach when one experiences the show from the get-go. Bye Bye, Earth has a lot of moving parts in its lore, such as how it uses traditional musical terms (Conductors and the like, to form an orchestra they call Schwert Muzik) to deviate from the normality of generic adventurer parties and such, as well as swords that sound ridiculous, but are aptly spelled backwards from regular words that are given meaning to it (e.g. Belle's Runding sword teaching Erehwon (nowhere spelled backwards), meaning utopia). This is cusped by even more "will of the gods"-type plot/premise that basically everyone is tied to the fate of the gods, scenarios that have been depicted towards life or death, and this forms the shape of the main characters and their endeavours. Belle isn't without negativity in her mind that besets her from her growing-up years, it's that she chose to overcome adversity on any challenge that comes her way, and the gods see her as a chess piece on their playfield. Adonis the Question, on the other hand, is a cursed being from the very beginning; any sword he touches rots and disintegrates in his hands, and there's no way to fight this curse, even by wearing gloves. These two mainly live and breathe their experiences together, even as a cursed couple who begins to understand their origins and the factors mitigating their circumstances, like so in a fully dictatorship (almost monocracy) society, and survive the hell they have to in an unjust world. However, as you, the audience, will, you'll just have to pick up the nuances...because one blink, and you'll be utterly lost in this rather convoluted story. The other characters are more like plot movers, intentional or not. Take Kitty the All, for example, Belle saving him (as a tuxedo-suited bunny) from danger from the start, he is one of the discriminated Rabbitia races that repays their saviour in their time of need, and Kitty's an able animal who has decent magic power enough to act as Belle's shield. But on a whole, you won't be remembering much of the side cast who gives the plot-heavy story an already progressive problem to begin with. For what Crunchyroll's marketing buzzwords meant that Bye Bye, Earth "is considered to be his (Tow Ubukata) origin, and many have deemed it impossible to animate," in actuality, it's just not hard to animate fantasy shows like this being lost in translation from the novel to the small screen (thankfully this ISN'T Crunchyroll Originals that the label is simply D.O.A-ed from the start). I think that Liden Films did a decent job, it's just that this low-bar quality is reminiscent of another fantasy work from the studio: Winter 2021's Urasekai Picnic (and even that was a studio collab with Felix Flim). Moreover, the critical direction of in-house director Yasuto Nishikata is very glaring, and it's obvious that the Killing Bites and Hortensia Saga director didn't really understand what makes a good narrative (especially for a lore-heavy work like this) work, much less get the audience invested into the show, and thereby just piecing chunks of the novel together for a "cohesive" straight-line path, essentially just getting the story directing from start to finish. Even with the impeccable talent of scriptwriter-cum-series composer Hiroyuki Yoshino, the director will flourish or kill the series based on his/her direction, and I feel that Yasuto Nishikata is to blame for the series failing as it is. Alas, the musical talent of Made in Abyss composer Kevin Penkin also feels wasted due to Yasuto Nishikata's direction, though I will not say that this is his finest work thus far. Considering the immaculate work on high-profile shows in the past under his name, Bye Bye, Earth's OST feels a lot pedestrian towards the fantasy side of things, but a really low bar set for the series as it shows. ASCA's OP works, but it's just there, and as much as I want to like LMYK's ED which sounds good, it too also suffered from the show's eponymous title as a post-apocalyptic setting more than anything. I...really want to like Bye Bye, Earth, being the fantasy show that stands out from the seasonal copy-paste Isekai/fantasy shtick with its interesting concepts and developments that are reminscent of some notables (like Summer 1998's Serial Experiments Lain) around the turn of the millennium. But with its lackluster presentation that sucks the life out of both the staff behind the show, as well as the audience into trying to process what just happened with each progressive episode, it's not just subpar storytelling, but a recipe for failure, and it really shows. With Season 1 being just the adaptation of the 1st half a.k.a Volume 1 of the novel, will Season 2 change the tide with Volume 2 and tie everything together cohesively? I hope I can live the day to see its salvation and redemption of the near-impossible. For now, you've just got to grit through an imperfect product of a rather ambitious work.
This show is devastatingly disappointing. I want nothing more than to sing its praises, but unfortunately that is not possible with what is delivered. The first episode is incredible, perfect presentation. The music is on point, the animation is gorgeous, the world is intriguing, and the characters are interesting. It provides the perfect setup to a somewhat fresh and unique mystery about the main character. Episode 2 continues the mystery and starts putting up roadblocks our MC will have to surpass to get there. Episode 3 continues to delve into those blocks and teach the audience about this micro society full of rules and traditionthat gets in the protagonists way. Episode 4 has the MC start to engage more with this strange society. By Episode 5 she barely seems to care about getting out of this place and starts a wierd romance with some creep. Episode 6... wait, aren't there only 10 episodes? Why have we still not gotten past this intro BS and into the thing the inciting incident set up. Why am I now being expected to care about tree politics? Wasn't this whole stop in the wierd civilization just to essentially get a passport and leave? And there, reader, is the problem with this show. It sets a very high bar and then proceeds to drop into into the center of the earth. They wrote an amazing introduction to a story they didn't care to tell. After the fakeout, all that is left is a few hours of pointless drama amongst characters you've been conditioned to assume are minor and temporary. The end of the short 10 Episode season doesn't even have the grace to show a glimpse of that mystery they set up in Episode 1. Instead, it ends with an implication that we're getting another entire season of the same boring politics and cult BS. Just stay away from this show, it's worse than a bad show because it gives you a glimmer of hope, but just leads you on all the way to absolutely nothing.
i personally enjoyed this, it was confusing and id have preferred it to be longer but overall it kept my interest and though i spent most of my time wondering what it was about, which im still not sure on, its doing something different and i appreciate that all things considered of the recent fantasy shows i have watched 1 was an isekai the other straight fantasy world and both where less than meh though for dramatically different reasons and i only finished them to see how bad they could get. this one was a head scratcher. its no tensura but its not 'parryreality perception' either. ordinarily id hit up the manga to see whats next but this time i think ill wait for the next season and hope the animation is as nice as it was for this one if not better. overall id say if you like something different and dont mind being utterly lost and have already finished everything else worth watching give it a chance, if nothing else its got some gorgeous visuals
This show is an interesting watch from start to finish. I did not mean interesting as in it kept my attention the whole time though. It was interesting in the fact that it was very confusing at times to keep track of. I'm not sure if the manga was like this too, but it feels like some plot points were not discussed when it should have. The art style and animation is great for a series airing weekly. The MC is generic. Short black haired girl that is OP. Her powers are set back only by a curse. I think this is a good watchif you want something to relax to at the end of the day. It isn't a groundbreaking series.
To sum it up a confusing experience. There are some things that happen that made me incredibly uncomfortable. I was at first intrigued but they don't do much with the world that they have set up or even with the characters, nothing is really explained or acknowledged. This could have been something great. It was nice to see an anthropomorphic world but the had no impact on the story it may have well have been just humans an intriguing aspect became boring. It could be improved if the seasons continues so i will see but currently i am 50/50 in whether this is worth itor not.
The Setup: Cool or Meh? Okay, so Bye Bye, Earth starts with Belle Lablac, the only human in a world full of animal-people. Sounds pretty wild, right? It’s got that Beastars energy but darker, like it’s constantly raining in this world. Belle’s journey to figure out who (or what) she is feels fresh, but if I’m comparing, it doesn’t quite hit the emotional highs of Made in Abyss. It’s cool, just not “Oh-my-gosh-I’m-crying” cool. Belle: Badass or Bland? I like Belle. She’s tough, she’s got this massive sword, Runding, and she’s all about finding creative ways to fight without hurting anyone. That’s a fun twist! But compared toChise from The Ancient Magus' Bride? Chise pulls you into her world emotionally; Belle feels more like, “Hey, I’m here, swinging my sword, doing my thing.” It’s not bad, just not as deep as I wanted. The World: Immersive or Confusing? The world-building? It’s solid. You’ve got this anthropomorphic society with its own rules and quirks. It’s like a more grounded version of No Game No Life, but not as visually stunning as Made in Abyss. The lore’s interesting, but it’s like the anime throws you into the deep end without a floatie. I had to pause a few times like, “Wait, what’s happening now?” Pacing: Smooth or Rough? Here’s the thing—it’s kind of a slog at points. Shows like Attack on Titan know how to keep you hooked while piling on the complexity. Bye Bye, Earth? Not so much. It’s like it’s trying to do too much at once, and you’re left scratching your head. If you’re into shows that make you work for it, this might be your jam. For me, it’s a bit hit-or-miss. Looks and Vibes: Fire or Forgettable? Visually? It’s fine. Nothing mind-blowing, but Belle’s “Faceless” design is super unique. The action’s clean, but I wish it pushed the envelope more. The soundtrack, though? Absolute banger. It’s got that haunting, atmospheric vibe you’d expect from Made in Abyss. If nothing else, the music pulls you right into Belle’s lonely little corner of the world. Final Thoughts: Should You Watch? So, here’s the deal. If you’re into fantasy anime that’s a little off the beaten path—think Beastars or Grimgar of Fantasy and Ash—you’ll probably dig this. But if you’re expecting something as polished and emotional as Made in Abyss or The Ancient Magus' Bride, you might feel a bit let down. I’d say it’s a 7 out of 10—interesting enough to check out, but not quite a must-watch.
no spoilers here, just something you should know if you decide to watch this. I haven't read manga, but clearly this anime didn't have much budget to tell the story. I rated 5 Because this anime has huuuuuge potential, but it's also clear that it was cut short. the plot itself is amazing, but it should have been at least 24 episodes to tell the story. From action to action, memories to memories, jumping left and right constantly. Even though it said "to be continued", for example what should have been told in 3 episodes, it was cut into 1 and etc. extremely shortened. This isjust an example and not related to plot. Imagine when MC travels from city A to City B and there is a huge desert with adventures along the road and that desert has like 10 episodes, but was cut into 1 episode. Like simply pointing about that MC travelled from A to B with some adventures. it was cut that short. So overall plot is confusing and weird, but behind the scenes the story, the world itself is amazing. Thus I rated 5. because it has potential. for example if it will be decided to remake this or if next season will have 24 episodes which explains all of this. For now let's say these 10 episodes are just intro of the story.
Hmm. This show is a lot. A mixed bag. The mixiest of bags. After watching all 10 episodes in one sitting one thing is certain. This show has got some of the best and the worst when it comes to the animation genre. As it is very much a mystery it is hard to judge whether it is more of the good or of the bad yet anyway. The animation for one is disappointingly juxtaposed to the density of the plot, the vast amount of fresh fantasy elements and the theme rich soundtrack. It is not exactly horrible, but unfortunately an action oriented show. The aforementionedbad is of the kind that makes the watch only enjoyable for people who have watched - kind of - enough well animated shows and are maybe craving a more creative story telling, a multi faceted world and many mysteries to uncover instead. Of that this show got an awful lot. The first five episodes are a literal fountain of ideas scattered all around the place. And i personally found it to be a rather pretty kind of fountain. Characters with death flags waving all around them, unlikable ones, have complete turn-arounds to being protagonists, heroes and positively divine beings turn out to be somberly shaded. Thus this show ultimately begs the question: is the writing good enough to hold the show together despite it's faulty animation and extremely short runtime? Or is it overly ambitious and penned by novice in the field? Is the show just an uncoordinated mess of a mystery that will never make sense, are the many fantasy gimmicks just a diversion and are the narrative stakes bloated out of proportion? The answer to this can not yet be given but pndered. Had the animation been at least twice as good, and some character designs just a bit less "edgy" we probably would like to lean more towards the former. Had it been a lot less creative with the many fantasy ideas it conjured up, we would've easily identified it as the latter. Overall this show was a fun watch. And it would raise my standards for upcoming fantasy shows, but unfortunately much of the emotional load couldn't be fully delivered, as this adaptaion might've ultimately not gotten the runtime, it required to introduce 10 different characters (of which some of them die off screen believe it or not). Before going into the afterword there has to be some light shed onto the soundtrack. Not being the prettiest or best of all time is a given. Though it is not exactly lacking at all either. At many times it is surprisingly fitting and accompannying certain plot developments with high success. Furthermore it comes with the added benifit of being pretty novel to the ear. There is also some serious sopranist action going on. Arguably, the music feathers some of the burden the animation fails to carry and the sheer quality at times, can make one wonder, whether this anime actually maybe came to be because of the soundtrack and not the other way around. On an endnote i just want to say that i don't rate shows on a very logical basis but by the feels. As the show has given me a lot of excitement i will look into a second season, should that be a thing sometime. But the animation was so bad and the writing feels like it's drifiting into full european mode at any time now, i will carefully rate this show a 6/10 as of yet. Should the continuation expand the mystery and improve at least a bit on the animation i might come back to kick it up a bit.
This anime was thought to be by many as the worst anime of the year... and I'm struggling to understand why. The biggest gripe people seem to have is that worldly things weren't explained fully. I find this to be lacking as a critique. The anime follows old fantasy rules and builds the world with the viewer being told x is x, and y is y. There is no reason for us to know why x and y are x and y. It is the formula of norm in manga and anime these days to explain everything as they show up, from new techniques to explanations aboutflora and fauna. Bye bye earth goes back to old fantasy book roots and just lets you live in the world similar to LOTR or Wheel of time. Some concepts are never explained in these epics, they just are. The plot and group battles are quirky and out there. A lot of the show seems like the author may have been under the influence of psychedelics when thinking these concepts up, but it's fun, fresh, and different. Art/Animation - 7.5 overall, up to 8.5 at its heights Fluid and crisp. Lighting is great and color palettes are well thought out. Some of the fights were pretty good. Not Demon Slayer good, but better than a lot of the generic 7/10 Isekais we get every season. Characters - 8 The slow burn of the characters is welcomed. The fact they did this in only ten episodes but made it so introspective while covering quite a bit of time, is really well done. The characters grow, rise, and fall. We see different aspects of them. We see the mortality of sentient beings, the pitfalls of despair... and the ruins of isolation. Plot - 8/9 The plot was something I found easy to follow along, but there are so many whacky concepts in there that I can see why some people can't suspend their beliefs and let it be. There is a lot of outside the box thinking and if you're not one of those types you might find this confusing. But I thought it was refreshing and enjoyable. For all intents and purposes, the plot looks like it has the potential to scale drastically and become an epic fantasy. Music - 7 Music is fine. Some tracks were pretty good. But what was appreciated is the timing and matching the scenes well. Conclusion: If you like outside the box, try this and see if it tickles your fancy. It isn't your typical isekai power fantasy. But that doesn't have to be a bad thing
'Bye Bye, Earth' has been recently regarded as the worst anime of the year. I am pretty sure the makers didn't meant it to be bad unlike those isekais that seek to make quick cash by intention but from the start to the end this animé never explained itself like the time-travelling aspect in 'Tokyo Revengers' (where did it come from to how did come even… like is this magic, technology, imagination etc or why even, like MC some son of special characters with greater duty to have these abilities?) which is the similar case for 'Bye Bye, Earth' like is this an analogy ofbeing a straight person in a non-binary future or an individual to conformist or an independent to sheep that bow before salary based life in typical Japan where the abnormal consider themselves the normal? The limited number of episodes (10) certainly doesn't do justice when it's trying to flow outside of the norm where those like Frieren or Fable has 25 that pick things up eventually - Even though I can understand the character was born out of crystal instead of a normal birth while being a human, it doesn't address or answer anything to why while the entire season itself ended up finished nor lays any hope future seasons are supposed to clear this up. No one can see themselves in the story or in the protagonist to make a connection or relevance whether to be angry, excited, pleased, hopeful or even horny - like nothing. Throughout the entire season, the only emotion viewers were carrying with every episode is a state of confusion even in the most intense of scenes which is pretty bad as an animé where viewers don't expect 'how' whether from plot-armour/magic/gifted-abilities etc which in this case was constant 'why?' even in the sexual-assault scene.
This story is a better show than I am viewer. It starts of in a rather cliche manner but rapidly gets serious in a nonchalant way. The universe is crafted rather uniquely with obvious elements of classic anime fantasy and a touch of Alice in wonderland. Belle, our Alice, is our protagonist, or so I am led to believe, and is the only pure human surrounded by furies. They don't think of her as human since they don't know what that is, so she is just lacking in their opinion, but she isn't really ostracized either. An interesting move is that their version of animals is1/2 plant. Swords are grown and not made. Battles are fought in acts resembling a play. Thing get really strange, and a lot of detail went into it. This is where me as a weak viewer looking for a quick fix comes in. The pacing feels slow when it really isn't. Everyone's motivations are clear and sufficient back story is given so that you are not lost, but something about the execution of this still seems off. I found myself dozing off and having to skip back to rewatch the part of the show I missed a lot. The sound and voice acting were decent. The CGI was jarring as always. The finally, while not a cliff hanger, clearly is setting itself up for a second season but I doubt it is coming with this show sub 7 aggregated score.
It had a lot of potential at the start and was cool for the first few episodes. But from the middle to the end, it kind of dropped off. I was often feeling confused about what was even going on. The band centered combat system was strange to say the least. It looks good, nice production quality. But the world building is just confusing. Some fights hit while others missed for me. The relationship drama was kind of cringe and or even annoying at times, though that's probably because that's just not what I prefer to watch. I started it for unique action-packed fantasy followinga buster sword waifu, not relationship drama. I don't watch roms, unless they are rom coms with a lot of quirky fun antics. The world building being confusing was the biggest issue for me, especially since many of the fights were highly dependent on the world building dynamics to understand why and how they were occurring. Had it been done better; it would have been a very good show.
This is a good but very confusing anime. The world lore is extremely complex, and from the start you are thrown in the middle of everything with little explanation on what's going on. It is complete insanity, an absolute energy drainer, and it gave me a headache while watching. With that said, the story in this anime draws you in, it makes you want to understand the world of the anime and figure out what's going on. It's a tough but very interesting and enjoyable watch. I've never seen another anime like it. I'd recommend watching, if you're up for something like it, but it's certainlynot for everyone.
Bye Bye, Earth is a bit of a mystery in itself. The art style and animation are solid, drawing you into a world that feels both familiar and strange, and the voice acting and music elevate the whole experience. The world-building and characters stand out, too—there’s a real sense of depth here. But here’s the thing: it feels like the series needed more time to fully explore the many plot threads and elements of this unique world. Some things go unexplained, leaving you guessing and filling in the blanks. At first, I found this frustrating, but as I watched, I began to see it as intentional—maybethe creators wanted viewers to interpret parts of the story themselves. There are still some points I couldn’t quite grasp, but I made my peace with it and enjoyed the ride. I’m hoping for Season 2 to dive deeper into the world, but be warned: if you prefer everything laid out clearly, Bye Bye, Earth might not be for you. But if you’re open to piecing things together and want something a bit different, this anime is worth a shot—you won’t be disappointed!