In a war against four overpowered races—angels, demons, undeads, and humanoid beasts—humanity could only prevail thanks to its champion Sid, who defeated the other races' champions and sealed away their armies in four pyramids. In an age where Sid's existence has become but a legend of the past, Kai Sakura Vento is one of the many conscripts tasked with monitoring the pyramids in fear that these old foes would escape. On a peaceful day while spending time with his friend Jeanne E. Anise, the world is suddenly "overwritten," transporting Kai to an alternate reality where humanity has nearly been annihilated by the demons and forced into hiding. To make matters worse, his very existence has been erased from this world; all of his friends, including Jeanne, who leads the local resistance efforts in this world, have forgotten about him. Trying to investigate the remains of his former world, Kai encounters Rinne, an enigmatic young woman trapped in a pyramid. Mysteriously inheriting Sid's legendary sword Codeholder, Kai manages to free Rinne from her imprisonment. Determined to fix this reality, Kai joins forces with Rinne and Jeanne to free humanity from demonic rule. But if the valiant soldier wants to have a chance at returning to his original world, he will first have to uncover the cause behind the mysterious alteration of reality. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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The third of Sazane Kei’s to get an anime is actually the best in my opinion. Nazeboku had a really cool alternate timeline gimmick, mystery, characters and atmosphere that just hooked me from the start. What it lacks in animation quality it made up for in narrative and was really an entertaining watch. It’s not the best fantasy story in the world, but you know it has that “it” factor that I just liked and wanted more week after week. Admittedly very sad to see this one end with all the questions I still have about the world! Imagine you’re going about your daily life asusual and all of a sudden the world completely changes and no one remembers you despite all the same people you remember being around. Scary right? That’s basically the set up of this series and Kai’s journey to solve the mystery of “world reincarnation”. It was something I hadn’t seen before in an anime so in a sea of other fantasy shows it stood out a bit. Yea, Kai is OP, but he’s got limited allies and knowledge in this world so the whole appeal is seeing him reconnect with people he knew from the past timeline, explain to them the situation and enlist their help in saving the world. Humans who were originally the dominant species in his last world are now being hunted to near extinction with small pockets of humanity still fighting back against the various factions who want them dead. It had a bit of terminator salvation going on and I loved that. I’m a sucker for humanity on its last legs fighting back against near insurmountable odds and seeing Kai turn the tide of the war with his knowledge was cool. The characters are the highlight though. I think this had one of the more underrated casts this season. Jeanne, Reiren, Rinne etc were all powerful and competent and just made for a really fun travelling party dynamic. I love the classic fantasy trope of setting off on a long journey together and this show nailed that. It does start to get a little harem-y at the end, but it wasn’t like most seasonal anime so if you’re someone who’s grown a little tired of every girl falling in love with the MC, you’re mainly in the clear here. I also think the ones who do like the MC have a genuine reason for it, it’s not just because he was nice to them or something. Lot of fun banter between everyone, the jokes landed for me and they really did feel like a family. The one thing I didn’t like in terms of the cast is just how some fights with them were handled. Like Kai has a weapon that’s supposed to be a god tier relic and is strong as hell, yet he will leave Jeanne on her own to fight with a weapon that drains her life? This happened on a couple occasions and I was genuinely perplexed. Like I get wanting your female characters to be bad ass, but man don’t leave them to die like that. The only knocks against this show for me are the subpar production values and the fact it ended with me still having so many questions! This was a good fantasy story and I’m really dying to know more about the world reincarnation mystery. Seems like third time’s the charm for Sazane sensei, he really did a good job here. Nazeboku gets 8 out of 10.
Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World? - Oh Dear Good God, Kei Sazane. Finally, you have a story of your very own, but why does it have to look like dogshit when compared to your other works, which, despite having a tad better production, are absolute mediocrities overall? Man, what a shame. Sorry, forgive me for that rant. If you've been in the AniManga scene since the COVID era, you might've caught a glance at one particular show called Kimi to Boku no Saigo no Senjou, Aruiwa Sekai ga Hajimaru Seisen a.k.a Our Last Crusade or the Rise of a New World (or shortenedto KimiSen). Written by novelist Kei Sazane, the anime came out in Fall 2020, that tells of a Romeo and Juilet-inspired story in a fantasy world. Needless to say, I was one of a handful of people who hated the show outright for it trying to be "innovative" in its concept, but rehashing the author's tried-and-true tropes of just about every cliche known to man, so much so that the entire anime was an absolute cringefest to sit through the seasonal worth of its 12 episodes. Come this year of 2024, and Kei Sazane is raking in more fame and (mostly bad) recognition, because this copy-paste imitation of an author has 3 of his most recent works under his belt being made into anime: the continuation of KimiSen into Season 2, last season's No Game, No Life ripoff (or more similarly of last Summer's Liar, Liar) of Kami wa Game ni Ueteiru. a.k.a Gods' Games We Play, and the work that out of the 3, that I REALLY wanted all the more to succeed: Naze Boku no Sekai wo Daremo Oboeteinai no ka? a.k.a Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World?, the most "original" work that Kei Sazane has ever done, even if it's by no means innovative in the fantasy genre. You've gotta hand it to this man, at least he tried something different for his own "unique flavour" that stands out in his copy-paste biography of works over the last decade or so, and I'm relieved that for once, by his own standards, Kei Sazane got that formula right out of the gate. What started out as your typical war between humans and other entities of races you can only find in fantasy novels and the like, suddenly gets shifted into a time paradigm where the war that's won by the humans and led by its titular hero character, is overwritten to the point that humans never existed in the alternate world. This is the plot device of MC Kai Sakura-Vento, a soldier of the existing Urza Federation who enjoyed the prosperity after humanity's hero of the Prophet Sid did the deed to render humanity as winners of the Great War of the Five Races, alongside his comrades of Ashran Highroll, Saki Miscotti, and his childhood friend of Jeanne E. Anis, whom he fought alongside the war, with whom the latter of the 3 he's bonded quite a lot to be potential future partners. The suddenness to have his world be mysteriously distorted in no time to assimilate, forcibly leaving the comfort of Jeanne and the new world and encountering another world where humans are not at the top nor bottom, but non-existing in the Great War, he is the only one who's sane (or insane, depending on the worldview) who has an inkling of Prophet Sid, and as the title goes: no one truly remembers who Kai is in the alternate world. It's up to him to find out what tracks this perverse course of action that renders the people he knows into complete strangers, and what exactly does his alternate world have in store for him retracing the Great War of the Five Races once again, only this time with some help that could get the alternate world back on track with the events of his world. Being the only one who remembers all that is within his old world, Kai slowly is aware of the events that he is part of, never truly got off the ground in the alternate world that knows no inkling of neither him nor the Prophet Sid at all. It's only when he meets the mysterious demon of Rinne, all chained up at what seems to be Heaven, as well as the sword that was imbued to him: Code Holder (that once belonged to Prophet Sid), Kai begins to slowly piece the sequence of events of humanity's speckle in a world where demons have truly taken over its timeline. And out of all the characters, even in the list of many "couple" MCs that Kei Sazane has put out so far, Kai and Rinne are the most passive when compared to KimiSen's Iska and Aliceliese, as well as Kami wa Game's Fay Theo Philus and Leoleshea. What's up with creating characters so backwards that you need extra characters to help progress him and her forward, This is not how you want to paint your central characters, especially for a world that's this elaborate, intricate, and, IMO, a decent sci-fi and power fantasy action series that has content to stand on its own heft. Most of the time, it feels like Kai and Rinne were forced into the alternate world just to make amends for the right course of action, as they meet characters from other races and align the correct vision against all odds, no matter how fearsome their opponents are. And one of them is Last Riser: the entity of anomaly who reacts to Sid's sword whenever it's used, that is akin to a moderator when things of Kai's world (such as Sid's name) are registered as taboo words that should not be said, and anyone who utters even just a minute of the word gets forcibly erased from the world, adding another layer into an already complex war that Kai, Jeanne and the others have to go through the same-old once again. To be clear, the story itself is fine and serviceable (and actually worth a second look), but Kai and Rinne have a lot of ways to go and gain ground if they truly want to stand out, and so far within the anime that's part of the already completed LN that ended back in August 2020, they've just been stuck like players who need to be fed quests to progress their plot forward. As I've said, it's truly a missed opportunity to have characters just be there to service its plot and not do more on their behalf, which unfortunately is the result of Kei Sazane himself prioritizing the wrong things for the right stuff. If anything, characters can make up for the lack of story, but not the other way around, and this show unfortunately is the sum of many errors that could make a potential difference. Oof, woe is Project No. 9 having an enigma of a Summer season adapting 2 shows in the same season, but the same 2 shows that have a very noticeable difference when compared against one another. While Senpai wa Otokonoko a.k.a Senpai Is an Otokonoko had Aniplex's backing, which allowed the anime to be marginally expressive to the point of being impressive thanks to the conglomerate's big budget, it's the complete opposite for this show where the coined "low-budget" term really comes into play. From the mediocre visuals to the horrible animation, it feels as if I have to second guess if I'm watching the exact same show of low expectations when it comes to production values to begin with. For sure, this is one of the worst produced shows of the season, and it's quite the jarring expose to watch a show so drab and dysfunctional. The year 2024 also brings all Kei Sazane works the affiliation with musical project Sizuk and J-Pop "hybride rock band" AliA, and if you're the type to like modern rock music, look no further than KimiSen's sequel season and Kami wa Game for that. But their music is just not to my tastes, and they're replaced by symphonic power metal band Unlucky Morpheus, whose OP song while being a fit to the show's themes, sounds average overall, but I'd argue that I'll take any song that's n Sizuk nor AliA any day. It truly pains me to say that Naze Boku no Sekai wo Daremo Oboeteinai no ka? a.k.a Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World?, while being the best work that Kei Sazane has ever done in recent years, the manga adaptation of the LN is a much better alternative to what the anime has shown us for the past 3 months. And as someone who legitimately trashes the author for his copy-paste tactics, he may have gotten a rare case of a W in the story section, everything else is just a massive L for something that could've been a success, if only he'd cared with the rest to give it the proper treatment that it truly deserves. If you excuse me, I shall go and read the manga adaptation instead and let the anime adaptation be just a blip that came and went with an unpleasant taste to my eyes. Only watch this if you have the sanity to suffer through all 12 episodes of unabated subpar animation.
I feel like this was just one of the shows that existed this season. It never made a strong impact either way. Neither negative or positive feelings. It was no, it was there, and I wasn’t having a bad time. That’s about all I can really say about it, in all honesty. The story was strange. A multi-species war breaks out, and the humans won. Oh wait, our mostly soulless protag gets taken to another world where it’s the same people, but the outcome of the war changes, and only he remembers what happened in the other world. Obviously the story gets a bit more advancedthan that eventually, but that’s the general idea. The problem is the story never really feels like it matters much. It just kinda checks the boxes and keeps moving never really stopping to let it all sink in. Cute girl, onto the next battle. Introduce characters just enough to make you not completely disinterested, and then onto the next action scene. As far as safe seasonal shows go, this really wasn’t al too bad. I just can’t really recommend it fully as for everything this does I think other shows do better. In fact Our Last Crusade… the author’s other offering I feel like is much better and it unfortunately got delayed.
I don't really write reviews but I really need to share my thoughts on this one. Not sure if spoiler alert, but storytelling was bad. The first and second halves were basically the same: mc and company raid the enemy base, each of them fights someone, mc and girl fight the main bad guy, sword gives him a power up, they win. The series tried too hard to be serious that all characters end up sounding monotone. The harem also seemed so unnecessary. I enjoy watching trash fantasy anime, but unlike those that everyone expects to be story-less, slice of life anime, made only for entertainment, this onehad an actual story but the execution sucked.
Really surprised how many 'not recommended' reviews this has. Apparently, the low score is also due to those who know the source material and not liking the anime. Is the animation absolutely amazing? No it isn't. But is it the worst? By no stretch of the imagination. There are much worse battles in anime that have higher ratings than this. Listen, it's low budget, but it isn't that bad. Some of the fights are even better than your usual trash isekai budget fights, which is what this should be compared to. The MLC and FLC are pretty bland, I'll give it that. But there are at leasta couple decent characters in there. But the strength in this anime imo is in the world building. The premise of the story seems kinda meh, but actually watching the plot play out is actually pretty interesting even if things seem to wrap up too neatly. Problem when trying to fit too much into one season. TLDR: If this had a bigger budget, people probably wouldn't rag on this as much as they do. The world building and story is decent and worth a watch.
Review Title : A Confusing Plot with No Substance Right from the start, Naze Boku no Sekai wo Daremo Oboeteinai no ka? offers an intriguing idea, but sadly, it never completely fulfills its promise. The series begins with a concept that’s hard to comprehend, providing minimal clarity regarding the characters or the universe they live in. As the narrative unfolds, it grows more perplexing, causing the audience to feel unsure about what is genuinely at risk or the identities of the characters themselves. This absence of guidance, combined with limited character growth, hinders the ability to establish a genuine connection with the narrative. The main problem withthe first season lies in its emphasis on displaying the protagonist’s abilities without developing a substantial storyline or emotional richness. The narrative depends excessively on the main character's might, yet lacking significant development or understanding of the other characters, it appears superficial. The occurrences that transpire are frequently diminished to mere display, lacking any genuine sense of meaning or advancement. In the end, the series seems like a lost chance. The perplexing storyline, absence of character growth, and dependence on shallow action sequences result in it seeming like a series of hollow instances. For individuals seeking a narrative with meaning, complexity, and captivating characters, this is a series I would advise against watching.
Disclosure: I am an absolute sucker for trash seasonal anime. This show, however, wasn’t that in any capacityz it’s not trash. It’s not horrible per se. It, however, wasn’t profound or insightful in any aspects. It was just there- it was mediocre. It wasn’t mediocre because of the plot. It was mediocre because of the horrible execution and incoherence of why and how things occurred. While the show was overall fine and had many good aspects of it, its nosedive in quality regarding both graphics/animation as well as plot coherency made it leave a really bitter taste in my mouth. While the plot seems logical forthe first couple episodes surrounding the show (the reoccurrence of a multi race war among fantasy races after the original hero which unified them all had their history overwritten), the events towards the end of the season were rushed and made little to no sense surrounding both why and how they occurred. Riddled with plot holes, poor pacing, and an incoherent course of events, the show was lackluster. It had potential to be a decent anime of the summer season, nonetheless, its many issues have rendered it quit forgettable. I’m honestly kind of disappointed having wasted time watching it because of how uneventful the show felt in the last episode. I would NOT recommend watching this show if you haven’t seen it already. I’d also wager that your enjoyment of the show will diminish as the episodes go by. It, however, isn’t necessarily a “bad” anime. I’ve seen so many worse which put a fraction of the time, money, and effort into it’s development. I, however, firmly believe that this show isn’t worth viewing for the average weeb on here, especially if you have decent expectations going in. I had no such expectations, nonetheless, I was disappointed with the ending and how the show developed for the worse as it progressed. These are just my two cents. Take it for what it is.
A story where you are the only one remembering the true version of the world, is it hard to deal with the sudden struggles that humanity suddenly has, after losing the war they originally had won. In this show do we follow Kai, a soldier that for some reason is the only one that isn’t overwritten when the rest of the world is. We then follow him struggle his way through a world where humanity has lost and now tries to save what he can. The only issue is how it all is executed. When it comes to the plot, it seems to be fairly interesting, whereit builds up around someone who’s greatest weapon is their knowledge of the true timeline. We also see plots where other characters get to shine and are introduced, which gives a more balanced view of the main characters. But the show is very much built around the fantasy and action genres, which is clearly shown, but sadly it falls flat due to the animation of the show. When it comes to the characters, do they have some interesting ideas for character development, where some of the personal plots they go through, can show some progression for both side and main characters. What holds back the characters from being actually great is once again the animation of the show. Now to get to the root of why I cannot recommend this show, the animation. The general problem in the animation can be surmised to, high amount of still images, little attention to details and slow movement overall. This brings down the plot, the characters and the action part of the show. With all of this is it hard to get invested with the plot and the characters since their conversations doesn’t seem like an animated show but like a slideshow with moving mouths. Also when it comes to the action part it is just not interesting when each strike is done with still images and little attention to the details in their movements, while dwelling too long on each strike in the fight. Overall would i not recommend the anime, it is just poorly executed and just ruins what could have been a good story. So if you like the concept, would i recommend reading the source material.
“Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World?” is what happens when an interesting idea is butchered by childish writing and nonsense logic. I’ll give credit where credit is due, despite having really bad writing in the plot and character departments and just bad in the story department, this show is at least focused. It successfully avoids a lot of crap of being side-tracked, which is a plague of most anime. There are few side quests and those that are here are still connected to the main plot. Before we start I would like to explain something. I will be talking about “plot” and “story”. Manypeople use those terms interchangeably. I’m not one of those people, so to make sure everyone is on the same page… I use the definitions for “plot” and “story” as Lisa Cron describes them: “What happens in the story is the PLOT, the surface events.” “STORY is about how the things that happen affect someone in pursuit of a difficult goal, and how that person changes internally as a result”. The story is pretty cool. A story about a young man thrusted into a totally different reality that has little to do with the one he was raised in. So far so good. This can, and should have been, a starting point of some really good plot. Maybe give it an existential twist like “Evangelion”, something melancholic like “Girls' Last Tour”, or maybe something more apocalyptic and depressing like “Now and Then, Here and There”? Nope. We get… “Zelda”. Well, that’s not entirely true. We get every boring cliche trope of a “Legend of Zelda” game but without the charm. I have seen a lot of anime that had an amazing story idea but the plot was just awful. “Why Does Nobody Remember Me” is just that. A good idea with a less than mediocre execution and terrine characters that are forgettable at best. To be honest the first episode is terrible for what’s to come, it would work better as a short flashback than an intro to a new series. Normally the first episode shows us the main hero, some of his backstory, maybe even people he cares about, factions and something about the main conflict / drama. This time we have an episode that gives us very little about the MC and wastes an opportunity to properly develop the relationship between him and his, soon to be gone, friends. There is no reason to give a damn about them (after all the MC doesn’t so why should we?) and so the drama has no weight behind it. Look, I’m a big fan of efficiency. Not only in anime, but we’re talking about one so let’s focus on the introduction to one. Give me something that doesn’t waste time with unnecessary bullshit, introduce the most important characters and story beats. The problem is, this time the first episode is too succinct. There is supposed to be drama regarding our MC - Kai, losing everything and having to adapt to the new world but… there is no drama in it. We only get 3 scenes with him interacting with his “friends”. Two of those are work related and the third one is a pseudo-date that doesn’t even last 5 minutes and doesn’t show how he exactly feels about the girl.. How the hell am I supposed to care about his circumstances when I have nothing to work with here? I have no idea how close those people are to him. What things they overcome together or even why they are friends. Nothing. Just some plot bullshit to pretend he has a stake in this show. I’ll get to that, don’t worry. The world building is pretty lazy. First of all we have two human military organizations in two different worlds, with different histories and purposes. Yet they share both the design of their uniforms and iconography. Why? I’m not saying they can’t be similar but exactly the same? Come on. That’s just lazy. 30 years passed and yet demons live in ruined human cities, elves live in forests. I know they are still at war with each other but 30 years is a lot of time to develop new settlements, new technology, new ways to use magic and hell, even a brand new culture. Yet this world is just basic fantasy shit without thought. Simple thing: Why the fuck does the demon hero live in a run down, decrepit old building? Now for the most… “enigmatic” (I’m gonna use that word, because I was told I use “stupid” too much) aspect. The whole Sid shtick. So… Sid was a human hero who basically soloed everyone and locked them up. Why didn’t he just kill them? I don’t know, maybe he thought humans would get too lazy if they didn’t use teenagers as half-assed guards. After the world changed only 2 people (initially) remember him. Our basic, white bread with no flavour MC and his amalgam companion Rinne. Why? It is implied that Kai’s case might be related to the fact he saw Sid’s sword when he was a kid but if that’s the case, that’s some more lazy writing right there. Furthermore, the big bad non-human bosses get some of their memories back (both about him and the previous world) when they hear his name. Why? Is it because Sid had contact with them? Ok. Let’s go with that. So we have 2 situations when someone might remember him. 1. When in previous contact with the man himself 2. When in previous contact with his… sword. Just a sword? Not like other belongings? So You’re telling me that in the previous war, nobody on the human side met the man, maybe even saw his sword? Especially not some of the higher ups of the human army? Not one person who might have come in contact with both Sid and his gear? Just the one person who happens to be the MC of a shitshow of logic and lazy writing? Yeah… that checks out. Secondly, There is no one from the opposite side of the war that survived an encounter with him and who could have had memories of him that would appear when someone used the name “Sid”? No? So everyone, except the bosses are what? Dead? Locked up? Where are they in the previous world? We get no info about what happened to other races, we don’t know if they were hunted to extinction, which is probably not the case, otherwise why spare their heroes? But the writing is so bad I wouldn't be surprised that the writer wings everything and has no idea about the plot in general. Ok, let’s talk about stakes. Obviously out overpowered, undeserving MC has none but to everyone who has an IQ higher than room temperature that’s just bullshit. First of all, Kai lost everything. Not just his job, not just his home, not just his friends. EVERYTHING. Think about it. The history he knows is probably useless, the political status quo has changed, the new versions of people he knew don’t know him. He’s basically alone in an unknown land and… he just rolled with it. No crisis of any kind. Oh, everyone I know has changed, I have nothing except my combat knowledge (that is still valid), gear and skill… oh well c'est la vie. Yeah… eff off with that. There is an even more insulting scene later on in the show. He is told that there might be a way to get his old world back, but it would destroy this one. He would get back his old “Friends” but he would have to essentially kill, not even kill, annihilate those he knows now. People he already formed connections with. Connections that have better development than anything we were shown in his previous world. The moffo doesn’t even care. There is no dilemma here, no drama, no one thinks that maybe, just maybe the man that helps them to combat other races will soon become a far greater danger than anything else? His goal is to return home. To do that he would have to destroy this world, kill everyone in this world and no one gives a damn about that? The fuck? Just how lazy is the writer? As You might have noticed I have zero respect for the story aspect. The writer clearly didn’t care about it, so why should I? That said, the plot is a better aspect. Still a bit lazy and repetitive but better than the story. From about episode 2 the plot kicks in in full swing and mostly stays that way. That’s probably the only redeeming factor for me not giving this show a 4 or 3 ranking. It’s focused and avoids side-tracking for the most part. There is some side-tracking but it’s surprisingly well woven into the main quest so it’s easy to miss. The main coterie is on a mission to defeat every other race. Do they do that? Fuck no. Not even close but they do develop some political alliances and I think that works far better in this kind of plot. The main example. After sending the first boss to the great beyond they haven’t really done much to defeat the whose race. There are still plenty of demons to go around and everyone is far more capable than humans. So what do they do? They call a ceasefire and it’s almost logical. Demons have other things to worry about than a human who can kill one of their greatest heroes. Fighting him would cost them a lot of resources and there is a chance he will die dealing with other races so I would say that was a pretty good call long term for both sides. The rest of the show is really similar in that aspect. Decision making from the non-humans is almost logical. Shame I can’t say the same about humans, there are a lot of dumb decisions that humans make. But You could make an argument that people are petty and dumb so it’s pretty on brand for them but I would still like to see an organised military organization that understands that they are in deep shit and everyone actually works for the greater good. One can dream. Apart from that the plot is pretty basic with a lot of things happening because they have to to advance it and not because they make sense. That is especially visible in the last 3 episodes. That’s just bullshit fest. To be honest the plot is so basic that You might just call it a sequence of quests given to our MCs that prove little to no real challenge for them. Go there. Defeat that. Have a few minutes of R&R, repeat. Yes, I know that most shows could be described that way but in this case it is more visible thanks to the blandness of the characters and the world itself. From about episode 3 You will understand that Kai and Rinne are unstoppable and could probably easily become symbols to rally all of humanity under them. Which would be far more practical than what they are doing right now, both in the case of “saving” humans and returning “home”. But that would require someone who understands both warfare, psychology and politics as a writer. Honestly? The show is bad when it comes to the story but the plot could be a source of entertainment. It’s focused and shows mostly the things that would be necessary in this type of war tale. We don’t get beach episodes, some kind of dick measuring contest for command (well… we do get that in the second arc but it’s so bad You will forget it in just an episode) or even the traditional chicks in harem are jealous of each other. We get that at the end of episode 12. If You don’t care about writing and just want to watch something that pretends to know what it is and cosplays it pretty well on the surface this could be a show for You.
I'm going to give it a 6, the premise of the show is good, however in the later episodes it's almost like they stopped trying, the earlier ones are definitely good though. if we were rating just the earlier episodes I would give it a 8 however we're rating the whole show so it goes down to a 6. Also I did like how it was set in more recent years, a lot of this type of animes are set in like a Skyrim-ish world that seems under-developed at least in the technological way. Also I did not like the last few minutes of theshow, and just ruins it in my eyes, like yeah sure they were kinda circling the idea throughout the show, but c'mon we gotta stop or at least minimize the goddamn harems dude. their fine every once in a while but it's every single one now. Anyways got off track there it's worth a watch if you have nothing better to do
The anime's target audience is probably children who have reached puberty. For me, the storyline is just badly written. It has a lot of logical errors and doesn't really score well in other ways either. No tension was built up and I didn't really feel like following the story. I struggled from one episode to the next. The plots are very superficial, the characters are shallow and the arguments end just as quickly as they started. When I think about it again, nothing really worked. Pointless story, pointless actions, irrelevant fights where you just knock out the "boss" and a weird story that doesn't really provide any answersand doesn't tell anything either.
This anime had the potential to become great, but as an anime only, I can say that it is just disappointing. We were left out of a lot of explanations. The budget constraints are clearly visible and at the same time, we can see that it was pretty much rushed. One moment, a lot of people are there and the other, only a few are there. Small things along with the rushed plot ruined this. Towards the end, fights, which normally should last 2–3 episodes, last about 10 minutes or even less than that. Animation: 6/10 It could've been a lot better than what we got.There's nothing extraordinary about this. Art: 8/10 I liked the character designs. Sound: 8/10 The ending song and a few soundtracks were to my liking. Story: 6/10 As I wrote earlier, if it were well paced and properly written, we would have got a great story. Instead, we got a rushed series with very little and delayed explanations for whatever was explained. Overall, it was fine at best to watch as a weekly show. If you missed this show while it was airing, I don't think it is worth watching. There are tons of other anime which are better. The concept used in the show is something that is not used many times, at least in the way it was portrayed in this show, but it did not do well.
The title of the show says it all. Cause at the end of it, I still cannot remember anything from this show, and I continuously forgot it was on the watch list. - Characters was bland and didnt stick out. - Plot existed and yet not really. - Introduced characters that had no impact on the show. - Animations, specially closer to the end of the show was pretty noticeable that the budget isnt doing it vs animation time. Overall. It could have BEEN an anime that had achieved a 7/10 or so from me, but honestly, this anime is a perfect example of MID. Neither good or bad. Just really forgettable.
It was bad.... like seriously bad. The entire crew of characters were just like what the f is going in the entirety of the anime. Like... how in the history of anime does that happen? In my humble opinion, I think it is just horrible writing and story planning. The story shouldn't be led by characters' own dialogue but the actual plot. This is what not following the all mighty "show, don't tell" looks like. The anime itself wasn't well made. Especially the fighting scenes. They just zoomed in to the main character and placed sounds and some jitters to show that he is fighting. Plus,the romantic feelings of the supposed harem were so sudden that I think the entire production team kinda forgot they needed that until the very last episode. Sure, they all held the hands of the brave male lead while he was in bed unconscious for three days~ even though I think his hardest fight wasn't with the last riser. It just was so.... lacking. The starting idea of the story was good but the execution was so miserable. I think it would have been more interesting if the goal wasn't just about defeating all the heroes. The plot line was so straight that it kinda felt childish.
What an interesting concept for an anime. The world building of this series had to be the best part about it. That an our hybrid heroine Rinne who helps Kai on his journey to reset this world. While the oblivious MC isn't usually my thing I must say the story, the characters, and the overall concept of worlds being overwritten made for a very good anime. On top of that the action comedy and fantasy elements blended pretty well with the overall story plot. So if you are looking for an alternate reality story with heroes in a fantasy environment then give Why Does NobodyRemember me in this World a watch!
I had already seen some anime this year that had their problems but this one surpassed them all, the beginning of the anime universe is interesting but it is poorly crafted, the story doesn't pick up pace and when it does it doesn't last at all, the plot is very poorly designed and the villain could be an interesting plot twist in the future like it was with kaijuu n8 but it was wasted, characters without charisma, weak and uninteresting dialogues and the animation manages to be strange at times showing characters more still than they should be and without expression, whoever wants to ventureinto this disaster good luck but I recommend going to see something else.
It seems to be one of my biggest hot takes that I enjoy "Naze Boku no Sekai wo Daremo Oboeteinai no ka?" quite a bit. The story really hooked me right from the first episode. I can be pretty picky about what I watch, especially since I’m not a fan of overly comedic shows. I lean more towards the dramatic side, which is why I think Attack on Titan is the best anime out there. Sure, I can appreciate some humor when it fits, but a lot of anime just feels too light and lacks real tension. "Naze Boku no Sekai" hits all the rightnotes for me—its animation is top-notch, and I find myself connecting with the characters because they always seem so determined. Plus, the fan service is done well; it shows some skin without crossing into ecchi territory. The action scenes are also impressive, featuring sweeping shots and grand set pieces. This is one of the most underrated anime I've seen, and I'm glad I gave it a shot.
I really like the idea for the story I think that was like no game no life with different race in war fighting for the world "domination", the characters seen slightly generic, but they are fair enough. The problem with this series was the very very poor animation quality I don’t know how they did this, the characters faces looks like nothing is happening in any moment, animation for the fight was the worst I’ve ever seen in a long time, direction of the chapter could be better with the dialog or the expressions, etc. For summary if the studios had put effort into itthis serios could be at least a 7.0 not a 6.something. A shame because I read the LN at is good is, not the big thing but is entertaining, the series with all his faults is entertaining for me, so with effort It would have been very good. I don’t know if can recommend this at the end, I will tell just to go the read the LN or the Manga.