अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंKadono village's shrine maiden has a guardian every generation. During Edo period, guardian Jinta confronts a demon foretelling a future Demon God's rise tied to their era. His quest to prev... सभी पढ़ेंKadono village's shrine maiden has a guardian every generation. During Edo period, guardian Jinta confronts a demon foretelling a future Demon God's rise tied to their era. His quest to prevent this spans centuries.Kadono village's shrine maiden has a guardian every generation. During Edo period, guardian Jinta confronts a demon foretelling a future Demon God's rise tied to their era. His quest to prevent this spans centuries.
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What an interesting series, truly.
"Kijin Gentoshou" is a series I can't recommend to everyone.
It's slow, has average animation, and many might even say it's boring.
However, there's something about it... it's not a dark "Kimetsu no Yaiba," no, it shines with its own light.
But it's contemplative, it takes its time to tell the story... but when there's a plot twist, it's impossible not to react.
The first episode itself is a declaration of interest; the length, animation, the plots, and the final outcome left me feeling drawn in.
Later, Jinta's story, told over the years, is a delight. It shows you the inexorable path of a half-demon, who is immortal but still has the flaws of any human.
There are plots, like the one about the invisible demon, whose ending left me broken.
There's the arc of the samurai and the demon trapped in the loop, or even the ending of Jinta's father, which are very sad.
However, even though I think it's a story with tremendous potential, it's hard to get into. As I said, it's slow, boring at times, and has average animation.
I'm not trying to change the pace, which for me is a fundamental part of what we're watching; however, it couldn't hurt to have a little love.
I'm eagerly awaiting the next batch of episodes to see what's in store for us from here on out.
"Kijin Gentoshou" is a series I can't recommend to everyone.
It's slow, has average animation, and many might even say it's boring.
However, there's something about it... it's not a dark "Kimetsu no Yaiba," no, it shines with its own light.
But it's contemplative, it takes its time to tell the story... but when there's a plot twist, it's impossible not to react.
The first episode itself is a declaration of interest; the length, animation, the plots, and the final outcome left me feeling drawn in.
Later, Jinta's story, told over the years, is a delight. It shows you the inexorable path of a half-demon, who is immortal but still has the flaws of any human.
There are plots, like the one about the invisible demon, whose ending left me broken.
There's the arc of the samurai and the demon trapped in the loop, or even the ending of Jinta's father, which are very sad.
However, even though I think it's a story with tremendous potential, it's hard to get into. As I said, it's slow, boring at times, and has average animation.
I'm not trying to change the pace, which for me is a fundamental part of what we're watching; however, it couldn't hurt to have a little love.
I'm eagerly awaiting the next batch of episodes to see what's in store for us from here on out.
Episode 1 started a bit weird for me and there are things in Episode that I hope will be revealed as the story goes. So far the stories and mysteries about demons that the Jinta is solving episode after episode are very interesting for me. The background stories speak of human relationships and human emotions such as greed, love, greed, etc., and how such strong emotions can turn anyone into a demon of their own.
Writing is creative and imaginative as its finest and I always look forward to the next episode.
The drawing and animation are top notch for me. I just wished there's an English dub though.
Writing is creative and imaginative as its finest and I always look forward to the next episode.
The drawing and animation are top notch for me. I just wished there's an English dub though.
10Khaize-7
At first glance i thought this was just a boring ripoff anime of mainstream ones such as demonslayer and so on. But after finishing this i have changed my opinion, this is a masterpiece the way the plots are unpredictable and plays with the viewers mind is just wow... the dilemma he faced and how he proceeds to face it is different compared to others making this a masterpiece with its own originality!
It's a series that is written like a coming of age story. From the son of a shop, to an adopted son becoming a Guardian, a ronin, a ramen shop owner, a gardener, a sealed sword and a high school student. It's a long journey and it's nice how the author weaves historical events with the story. It follows the MC from his beginnings in Kadono and to the Heisei era in Japan.
It's basically a story of accepting change. It also has a few twists and turns and one of them also explains the unanswered questions from the first volume.
I believe the first half is the strongest, and the later volumes are a bit weaker. He gets to know people and their children as well as losing those people, and the first volumes are just about loss, revenge and getting stronger.
Later on he becomes more mature throughout the series and he realises he is getting weaker. The more things the MC is carrying with him, the weaker he becomes and this weakness is also the only thing that could stop his sister.
It's a series that is written like a coming of age story. From the son of a shop, to an adopted son becoming a Guardian, a ronin, a ramen shop owner, a gardener, a sealed sword and a high school student. It's a long journey and it's nice how the author weaves historical events with the story. It follows the MC from his beginnings in Kadono and to the Heisei era in Japan.
It's basically a story of accepting change. It also has a few twists and turns and one of them also explains the unanswered questions from the first volume.
I believe the first half is the strongest, and the later volumes are a bit weaker. He gets to know people and their children as well as losing those people, and the first volumes are just about loss, revenge and getting stronger.
Later on he becomes more mature throughout the series and he realises he is getting weaker. The more things the MC is carrying with him, the weaker he becomes and this weakness is also the only thing that could stop his sister.
This thing is the best of this session better than demonslayer story is amazing.
In a saturated world of anime where recycled shonen tropes and overused isekai setups often dominate, *Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho* stands out like a solemn blade in the moonlight-elegant, refined, and deadly in its emotional precision. It doesn't just entertain; it cuts deep. This anime is a masterpiece because it balances brutal action with timeless storytelling, grounding supernatural spectacle in raw human emotion. Here's why it earns a solid 10/10.
### 1. **A Soulful Samurai Narrative With a Supernatural Edge**
At its heart, *Kijin Gentosho* is a tale of duty, loss, vengeance, and redemption. Protagonist Jinta, a samurai tasked with protecting his village, becomes the blade between humans and the yokai world. But this isn't just about slaying demons-it's about carrying the weight of time, history, and sacrifice. As the narrative spans centuries, it becomes more than a period drama-it becomes an epic. The anime seamlessly blends historical settings with folklore, never feeling like it compromises either for cheap thrills.
Unlike other demon-hunting anime that focus on raw spectacle (*Demon Slayer*, for example), *Kijin Gentosho* leans into philosophy. What is justice? What does it mean to protect? Is it loyalty, or is it love? Every battle Jinta fights-against both demons and time-becomes a metaphor for those questions.
### 2. **Masterful Pacing and Structure**
The anime is structured in a nonlinear fashion, jumping through different time periods-from the Edo period to modern Japan-but it never feels confusing. Instead, the fragmented storytelling heightens the sense of mystery and emotional gravity. You're not just following a hero; you're witnessing a legend in the making, slowly unfolding across eras. Each episode builds upon the last like layers of lacquer on a blade, until the final picture is both tragic and beautiful.
The pacing is patient, like a tea ceremony-quiet but deliberate. The anime trusts its audience to absorb the quiet moments, the silences between dialogue, the haunting shots of snowfall or blood-soaked earth. It's the kind of show that respects intelligence and emotional maturity.
### 3. **Emotionally Complex Characters**
Jinta isn't your typical overpowered protagonist. He's stoic, burdened, and painfully human. His sword isn't wielded for glory-it's a curse, a reminder of the people he couldn't save and the eternity he's forced to endure. Watching him evolve through centuries-sometimes as protector, sometimes as a forgotten ghost-is heart-wrenching.
Supporting characters like Suzune, the shrine maiden who anchors Jinta to his humanity, bring warmth and pain in equal measure. Every ally, every enemy, feels layered. Even the demons aren't just evil-they're tragic, twisted reflections of human flaws, sorrow, or revenge. That moral complexity elevates the narrative from a simple good-vs-evil story into something more akin to Greek tragedy.
### 4. **Stunning Visuals and Sound Design**
While the animation isn't flashy, it's undeniably beautiful. The use of color, particularly during emotional climaxes, is breathtaking-autumn leaves falling over a death scene, the cold whites and blues of a snowy battlefield, or the warm golds of fleeting peace. The combat is sharp, clean, and grounded in real swordsmanship, lending every fight weight and consequence.
Complementing the visuals is a hauntingly beautiful score-traditional instruments mixed with atmospheric soundscapes. The music doesn't overpower; it whispers, like the wind through bamboo, enhancing the feeling of watching a myth come alive.
### 5. **Themes That Resonate Across Time**
At its core, *Kijin Gentosho* is about what it means to carry your scars across lifetimes. It's about love that survives centuries, grief that never fades, and duty that transcends time. The anime doesn't need bombastic twists to impress-it just tells a story that feels real in its sadness and beauty.
That's why *Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho* is a 10/10. It's not just an anime-it's poetry written in steel and blood.
In a saturated world of anime where recycled shonen tropes and overused isekai setups often dominate, *Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho* stands out like a solemn blade in the moonlight-elegant, refined, and deadly in its emotional precision. It doesn't just entertain; it cuts deep. This anime is a masterpiece because it balances brutal action with timeless storytelling, grounding supernatural spectacle in raw human emotion. Here's why it earns a solid 10/10.
### 1. **A Soulful Samurai Narrative With a Supernatural Edge**
At its heart, *Kijin Gentosho* is a tale of duty, loss, vengeance, and redemption. Protagonist Jinta, a samurai tasked with protecting his village, becomes the blade between humans and the yokai world. But this isn't just about slaying demons-it's about carrying the weight of time, history, and sacrifice. As the narrative spans centuries, it becomes more than a period drama-it becomes an epic. The anime seamlessly blends historical settings with folklore, never feeling like it compromises either for cheap thrills.
Unlike other demon-hunting anime that focus on raw spectacle (*Demon Slayer*, for example), *Kijin Gentosho* leans into philosophy. What is justice? What does it mean to protect? Is it loyalty, or is it love? Every battle Jinta fights-against both demons and time-becomes a metaphor for those questions.
### 2. **Masterful Pacing and Structure**
The anime is structured in a nonlinear fashion, jumping through different time periods-from the Edo period to modern Japan-but it never feels confusing. Instead, the fragmented storytelling heightens the sense of mystery and emotional gravity. You're not just following a hero; you're witnessing a legend in the making, slowly unfolding across eras. Each episode builds upon the last like layers of lacquer on a blade, until the final picture is both tragic and beautiful.
The pacing is patient, like a tea ceremony-quiet but deliberate. The anime trusts its audience to absorb the quiet moments, the silences between dialogue, the haunting shots of snowfall or blood-soaked earth. It's the kind of show that respects intelligence and emotional maturity.
### 3. **Emotionally Complex Characters**
Jinta isn't your typical overpowered protagonist. He's stoic, burdened, and painfully human. His sword isn't wielded for glory-it's a curse, a reminder of the people he couldn't save and the eternity he's forced to endure. Watching him evolve through centuries-sometimes as protector, sometimes as a forgotten ghost-is heart-wrenching.
Supporting characters like Suzune, the shrine maiden who anchors Jinta to his humanity, bring warmth and pain in equal measure. Every ally, every enemy, feels layered. Even the demons aren't just evil-they're tragic, twisted reflections of human flaws, sorrow, or revenge. That moral complexity elevates the narrative from a simple good-vs-evil story into something more akin to Greek tragedy.
### 4. **Stunning Visuals and Sound Design**
While the animation isn't flashy, it's undeniably beautiful. The use of color, particularly during emotional climaxes, is breathtaking-autumn leaves falling over a death scene, the cold whites and blues of a snowy battlefield, or the warm golds of fleeting peace. The combat is sharp, clean, and grounded in real swordsmanship, lending every fight weight and consequence.
Complementing the visuals is a hauntingly beautiful score-traditional instruments mixed with atmospheric soundscapes. The music doesn't overpower; it whispers, like the wind through bamboo, enhancing the feeling of watching a myth come alive.
### 5. **Themes That Resonate Across Time**
At its core, *Kijin Gentosho* is about what it means to carry your scars across lifetimes. It's about love that survives centuries, grief that never fades, and duty that transcends time. The anime doesn't need bombastic twists to impress-it just tells a story that feels real in its sadness and beauty.
That's why *Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho* is a 10/10. It's not just an anime-it's poetry written in steel and blood.
Episode 1 is nearly an hour long, and it sets up a lot of lore, then by episode 2, there's a massive time skip, and by episode 4. You get the formula. Which isn't to say that it's a bad formula, but it is a SLOW FORMULA.
Episode 1: Brother and Sister flee from an abusive home. Get picked up by a "SENTINEL" a shinobi that's basically in charge of guarding the high preistess of the village. In the man's stead, the boy trains to be a sentinel himself so he can protect those that he loves.
The man's natural daughter becomes the new High Priestess of the village, and the boy fulfills his goal of being the Sentinel, along with another man. Things happen, and everything turns to crap. The man from the beginning loses everything when two demons come to town, one to act as a distraction, fighting the Man, and the other on a mission to find a legendary Demon of ALL DEMONS. Every bad guy fulfills their goal, leaving the man without an arm, and lost his loved one and sister in the process. Man gets a new arm after the demon he was charged with slaying gives him his arm, which turns the man into a demon, and the thing he swears to hunt.
Episode 2 and from there on: Now it becomes a hunt for the Demon of All Demons, so he goes from village to village as a Ronin, slaying demons, collecting bounties, and hopefully getting closer to finding the Demon Queen. Though, the parting gift from the demon, grants the man demonic powers, of which his is assimilation. Think Megaman. Beat a bad guy, steal his powers. AND THIS IS WHY IT'S A 7 OUT OF 10.
If you've watched enough Anime, you know where this is going, and how it's going to end, so now, if the episodic, monster of the week (or two weeks, in some cases) doesn't grab you, then you're left impatiently waiting for the end battle between Ronin vs Demon Queen.
Though, they do set up a slight twist in the first episode before the failed Sentinel leaves, one of the elders bestows upon him the village sword. Asking our protagonist; "What are you going to do, when you catch up to her?" and He says; "I'll try to reason with it, and if that doesn't work, I'll do what I must." So, you get the whole, not every demon may die and some may be reasoned with, which is a lesson they teach us by episode 3.
This only has 9 dubbed episodes, at the time, and 16 full episodes. I don't see how they sustain this. This isn't a Shoenen like Naruto, meaning it doesn't need the MERCHANDISE SALE like those do, this is an ADULT ANIME with RED blood, and everything. Though, it's not GRATUITOUS for Gratuitous sake. Blood makes sense and this is a more contemplative anime, since you try to figure out the demons' motives, and use that to take the demon down. Hence the SLOW part, it's a bit of a detective CONAN kind of... And it's ALRIGHT. Beautiful to look at, nice slower pace, fights aren't silly and over drawn out, there's some thought and thinking going on here. It's a very Japanophile show, meaning if you're into SHINTO lore, then this will sate you. If not, it will bore you. It's like Hell Girl mixed with Mushishi.
Episode 1: Brother and Sister flee from an abusive home. Get picked up by a "SENTINEL" a shinobi that's basically in charge of guarding the high preistess of the village. In the man's stead, the boy trains to be a sentinel himself so he can protect those that he loves.
The man's natural daughter becomes the new High Priestess of the village, and the boy fulfills his goal of being the Sentinel, along with another man. Things happen, and everything turns to crap. The man from the beginning loses everything when two demons come to town, one to act as a distraction, fighting the Man, and the other on a mission to find a legendary Demon of ALL DEMONS. Every bad guy fulfills their goal, leaving the man without an arm, and lost his loved one and sister in the process. Man gets a new arm after the demon he was charged with slaying gives him his arm, which turns the man into a demon, and the thing he swears to hunt.
Episode 2 and from there on: Now it becomes a hunt for the Demon of All Demons, so he goes from village to village as a Ronin, slaying demons, collecting bounties, and hopefully getting closer to finding the Demon Queen. Though, the parting gift from the demon, grants the man demonic powers, of which his is assimilation. Think Megaman. Beat a bad guy, steal his powers. AND THIS IS WHY IT'S A 7 OUT OF 10.
If you've watched enough Anime, you know where this is going, and how it's going to end, so now, if the episodic, monster of the week (or two weeks, in some cases) doesn't grab you, then you're left impatiently waiting for the end battle between Ronin vs Demon Queen.
Though, they do set up a slight twist in the first episode before the failed Sentinel leaves, one of the elders bestows upon him the village sword. Asking our protagonist; "What are you going to do, when you catch up to her?" and He says; "I'll try to reason with it, and if that doesn't work, I'll do what I must." So, you get the whole, not every demon may die and some may be reasoned with, which is a lesson they teach us by episode 3.
This only has 9 dubbed episodes, at the time, and 16 full episodes. I don't see how they sustain this. This isn't a Shoenen like Naruto, meaning it doesn't need the MERCHANDISE SALE like those do, this is an ADULT ANIME with RED blood, and everything. Though, it's not GRATUITOUS for Gratuitous sake. Blood makes sense and this is a more contemplative anime, since you try to figure out the demons' motives, and use that to take the demon down. Hence the SLOW part, it's a bit of a detective CONAN kind of... And it's ALRIGHT. Beautiful to look at, nice slower pace, fights aren't silly and over drawn out, there's some thought and thinking going on here. It's a very Japanophile show, meaning if you're into SHINTO lore, then this will sate you. If not, it will bore you. It's like Hell Girl mixed with Mushishi.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe first episode has a runtime of ~1 hour.
- साउंडट्रैकSenya Ichiya (feat. Izumi Nakasone (HY))
[Ending Theme]
Music by Toc (as TOC), Izumi Nakasone (HY), by Waplan (as WAPLAN)
Arranged by Waplan (as WAPLAN)
Lyrics by Toc (as TOC), Izumi Nakasone (HY)
Performed by Hilcrhyme feat. Izumi Nakasone (HY)
टॉप पसंद
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- Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho
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