Follows Oliver Horn as he enters a prestigious magic school named Kimberly. He discovers that not everything is as it seems, with the emergence of labyrinths, monsters, and other threats tha... Read allFollows Oliver Horn as he enters a prestigious magic school named Kimberly. He discovers that not everything is as it seems, with the emergence of labyrinths, monsters, and other threats that endanger the students.Follows Oliver Horn as he enters a prestigious magic school named Kimberly. He discovers that not everything is as it seems, with the emergence of labyrinths, monsters, and other threats that endanger the students.
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I watched four episodes, the last of which -- it was about a bloody arena fight with a "divine" magical creature that came about very suddenly -- only in fast forward.
Episode 1: six students meet on the way to the new magic school and are practically close friends from then on. At least according to the series. The friendship between the six magic students is not made credible. One of the magic students has a left-liberal attitude -- she campaigns for the rights of half-humans and animals. And she does so so extremely doggedly and ideologically. It seems to me as if the author only brought this character into play to create conflict between students and between students and teachers. Ultimately, these kinds of conflicts are also the main theme of the series in the first episodes -- what makes the magic school so dangerous from the start (20% of the students are to be killed by the end of the academy's lessons, which the headmistress announces right at the start with the motto "I don't care").
It quickly becomes clear that two characters play the main role: a student named Oliver Horn, who comes from an old family of magicians and apparently has hidden fighting knowledge and other secret talents. Occasionally, scenes are interspersed where he conspiratorially meets with a kind of female bodyguard and talks to her about a big task for which she is supposed to protect him at the dangerous school. The other main character is a supernaturally good samurai swords-woman who has already murdered many people and was simply plucked from a battlefield in the Far East at a critical moment to become a student at the magic school. She has a death wish and her hair turns white when she fights -- which ironically is supposed to indicate special magical purity... kind of strange for someone who has already killed a lot of people. In general, the show is less about magic than about sword fights. The magical environment in the fights only seems like decoration, what it really seems to be about is sword fights with fantasy elements, as you know from the Far Eastern samurai series.
This anime is well-equipped with violent scenes: blood flows, heads fly... but you don't really feel any empathy for the characters. This may also be because the anime -- which only has 15 episodes in season 1 -- seems to fast-forward through the plot of the basic light novel series too quickly and superficially.
Visually, the characters don't look very impressive. They all look like "normal" (no fat ones, they all have athletic builds) students. Only the hair color and hairstyle are played with a little, otherwise everything is boring and average. It takes a while before you can tell them apart.
I couldn't recommend the light novel series to anyone either, because the plot as a whole seems to me to be just an unoriginal, dark imitation of the Harry Potter plot.
Episode 1: six students meet on the way to the new magic school and are practically close friends from then on. At least according to the series. The friendship between the six magic students is not made credible. One of the magic students has a left-liberal attitude -- she campaigns for the rights of half-humans and animals. And she does so so extremely doggedly and ideologically. It seems to me as if the author only brought this character into play to create conflict between students and between students and teachers. Ultimately, these kinds of conflicts are also the main theme of the series in the first episodes -- what makes the magic school so dangerous from the start (20% of the students are to be killed by the end of the academy's lessons, which the headmistress announces right at the start with the motto "I don't care").
It quickly becomes clear that two characters play the main role: a student named Oliver Horn, who comes from an old family of magicians and apparently has hidden fighting knowledge and other secret talents. Occasionally, scenes are interspersed where he conspiratorially meets with a kind of female bodyguard and talks to her about a big task for which she is supposed to protect him at the dangerous school. The other main character is a supernaturally good samurai swords-woman who has already murdered many people and was simply plucked from a battlefield in the Far East at a critical moment to become a student at the magic school. She has a death wish and her hair turns white when she fights -- which ironically is supposed to indicate special magical purity... kind of strange for someone who has already killed a lot of people. In general, the show is less about magic than about sword fights. The magical environment in the fights only seems like decoration, what it really seems to be about is sword fights with fantasy elements, as you know from the Far Eastern samurai series.
This anime is well-equipped with violent scenes: blood flows, heads fly... but you don't really feel any empathy for the characters. This may also be because the anime -- which only has 15 episodes in season 1 -- seems to fast-forward through the plot of the basic light novel series too quickly and superficially.
Visually, the characters don't look very impressive. They all look like "normal" (no fat ones, they all have athletic builds) students. Only the hair color and hairstyle are played with a little, otherwise everything is boring and average. It takes a while before you can tell them apart.
I couldn't recommend the light novel series to anyone either, because the plot as a whole seems to me to be just an unoriginal, dark imitation of the Harry Potter plot.
10omplayz
One of the better anime to come out this season takes a harry potter magic style into a perfect fit , no overpowered mc who can destroy the world , proper power scaling, interesting plot, twists and turn, no plot armour, and no annoying characters, good comedy
So many reasons to love this anime yet on most websites this anime has below 8 or even below 7 rating stars i am genuinely shocked at this. As of today 12 episodes have been out and they all have good animations, no noticeable CGI which most animes are hated for i went on hunting for reviews but all are either positive or just hating on it for being a eminence in the shadow copy?
One of the most underrated anime of the season hands down.
So many reasons to love this anime yet on most websites this anime has below 8 or even below 7 rating stars i am genuinely shocked at this. As of today 12 episodes have been out and they all have good animations, no noticeable CGI which most animes are hated for i went on hunting for reviews but all are either positive or just hating on it for being a eminence in the shadow copy?
One of the most underrated anime of the season hands down.
Reign of the Seven Spellblades is an adaptation of a novel series by Bokuto Uno, creator of Alderamin on the Sky. I read the manga first, then the novels, and have been waiting for this series for over two years.
This world is heavily inspired by the Harry Potter series, but with a lot of its own twists to make it distinct. This is not an action-comedy like the contemporary Mashle: Magic and Muscles; rather, this is more of a teen drama in a dark fantasy world, focusing on a core friend group of six students at a highly prestigious and very dangerous magic school, and particularly the romance between Oliver Horn, a jack-of-all-trades who is much more than he lets on, and Nanao Hibiya, a former samurai plucked from a battlefield in the Far East.
If you're looking for instant gratification with an OP MC, this is not the series for you. This is long-form, highly serialized storytelling that takes its sweet time establishing the world and the characters. And it's an enchanting world. It sucks to live in, but those who want to make it suck less have real support and are slowly making progress. But the old order isn't going to go down without a fight.
This world is heavily inspired by the Harry Potter series, but with a lot of its own twists to make it distinct. This is not an action-comedy like the contemporary Mashle: Magic and Muscles; rather, this is more of a teen drama in a dark fantasy world, focusing on a core friend group of six students at a highly prestigious and very dangerous magic school, and particularly the romance between Oliver Horn, a jack-of-all-trades who is much more than he lets on, and Nanao Hibiya, a former samurai plucked from a battlefield in the Far East.
If you're looking for instant gratification with an OP MC, this is not the series for you. This is long-form, highly serialized storytelling that takes its sweet time establishing the world and the characters. And it's an enchanting world. It sucks to live in, but those who want to make it suck less have real support and are slowly making progress. But the old order isn't going to go down without a fight.
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