Shangri-La Frontier
Original title: Shangri-La Frontier: Kusoge Hunter, Kamige ni Idoman to su
High schooler Rakuro loves beating bad games. But can he discover all the secrets hidden in a best-selling VR game?High schooler Rakuro loves beating bad games. But can he discover all the secrets hidden in a best-selling VR game?High schooler Rakuro loves beating bad games. But can he discover all the secrets hidden in a best-selling VR game?
- Awards
- 3 nominations total
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Featured review
Wasting time watching a new series just to find out it's terrible is the worst, so when Shangri-La Frontier popped up as an option I very nearly skipped it. No one talks about this show. There's no buzz or hype that I've seen whatsoever, and given how much mediocre anime there is out there at a glance this seemed more of the same. It isn't. It's actually quite good. I'd go so far as to say it's the best 'full-dive' online game anime I've ever seen, easily on par / surpassing bigger titles such as Log Horizon, Overlord, SAO, and Accel World.
The creators are obviously mmo gamers themselves. You can see this in showcased mechanics, message board behavior from the community, or hilarious moments set-up for maximum, social awkwardness. While you don't need to be a gamer to enjoy it (they provide charming, pop-up explanations for the uninitiated), it's made for people who are. Story itself is well told. Pacing in particular. A surprising amount of attention given to specific events makes you excited for what comes next. They could have cut out entire episodes for the sake of time or additional work involved but didn't. It's deliberate considering the context, and far better for it. Clearly there's real vision for the overall story being told and no shortcuts are being taken here.
SLF isn't an isekai. There are no life-threatening stakes involved, no one is trapped, and there are zero irl concerns worth mentioning of any kind. This is also a comedy first and foremost. It's deliberately dumb at certain points, and funny in the best way. SLF knows exactly what it is and pulls it off perfectly.
I really enjoyed this show. If any of the above sounds appealing, you will, too.
The creators are obviously mmo gamers themselves. You can see this in showcased mechanics, message board behavior from the community, or hilarious moments set-up for maximum, social awkwardness. While you don't need to be a gamer to enjoy it (they provide charming, pop-up explanations for the uninitiated), it's made for people who are. Story itself is well told. Pacing in particular. A surprising amount of attention given to specific events makes you excited for what comes next. They could have cut out entire episodes for the sake of time or additional work involved but didn't. It's deliberate considering the context, and far better for it. Clearly there's real vision for the overall story being told and no shortcuts are being taken here.
SLF isn't an isekai. There are no life-threatening stakes involved, no one is trapped, and there are zero irl concerns worth mentioning of any kind. This is also a comedy first and foremost. It's deliberately dumb at certain points, and funny in the best way. SLF knows exactly what it is and pulls it off perfectly.
I really enjoyed this show. If any of the above sounds appealing, you will, too.
- jochang-30856
- Apr 21, 2024
- Permalink
Storyline
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- SoundtracksBROKEN GAMES
[Opening Theme]
Music by Maquma (as MAQUMA), (sic)boy (as JACK)
Arranged by Honnwaka88 (as HONNWAKA88)
Lyrics by Maquma (as MAQUMA), (sic)boy (as JACK)
Rap Vocals by (sic)boy (as JACK)
Drums by Pierre Nakano (as KAMATA)
Guitar by Ivan Kwong (as GAVI)
Bass by Honnwaka88 (as HONNWAKA88)
Performed by FZMZ
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- Also known as
- Shangri-La Frontier: Crappy Game Hunter Challenges God-Tier Game
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime25 minutes
- Color
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