42 reviews
READ THE MANGA INSTEAD IT'S MUCH BETTER!
- ezratheraven
- Oct 6, 2024
- Permalink
It's disappointing!
Well I really want to give this a 7 because this isn't horrible, but I can't. This is a okayish series, but the worst thing is that it's just super disappointing.
It started well with the first episode. It was in my opinion pretty great. Then the drop in quality in episode 2 was very disappointing. Then the quality never got better for the rest of the series.
Animation quality dropped the most, but the pacing also got worse. I have to say though that episode 3 did have okay pacing, but still the animation quality was poor. Episode 2 and 4 felt pretty rushed in my opinion and had pretty bad pacing.
So is this series worth watching? Maybe. It's a short series and if you want to watch a okayish horror anime it might be worth checking out otherwise don't bother.
It started well with the first episode. It was in my opinion pretty great. Then the drop in quality in episode 2 was very disappointing. Then the quality never got better for the rest of the series.
Animation quality dropped the most, but the pacing also got worse. I have to say though that episode 3 did have okay pacing, but still the animation quality was poor. Episode 2 and 4 felt pretty rushed in my opinion and had pretty bad pacing.
So is this series worth watching? Maybe. It's a short series and if you want to watch a okayish horror anime it might be worth checking out otherwise don't bother.
- nicokautto
- Oct 20, 2024
- Permalink
Sorry I just can't ignore the faults
Uzumaki is a series which I had very high expectations of to be the best horror anime of the famous manga artist Junji Ito. I was excited when the anime's first episode was released; even after the atrocious pacing, I loved the animation, sound design, and voice acting. I was hoping they kept the slow pacing just like manga or at least a close enough pacing... But who am I kidding? If you want to complete a whole manga in 4 episodes with just 20 to 30-minute episodes, the pacing will be worse. Let's go to the 2 nd episode... Bro, everything changed except pacing. Well, the pacing went even worse, and the animation was worse than any studio could have made. The animation felt like animators were given mere days to complete the episode. Well, also, guess what? The studio was changed after the first episode, and they gave it to the worst animators out there... How could you!?!?! You made the fans wait for years, and you gave us this; it's pathetic; I am so disappointed not only in the anime but also in myself for expecting the masterpiece manga to get a well-justified anime adaptation... Now I have no hope...the rest of the 2 episodes will be worse, and it won't even be worth looking at...
- preetin-08391
- Oct 8, 2024
- Permalink
Everyone rating this a 10 after the first episode...
If episode 2-4 were the same quality of the first episode I'd be willing to rate this an 8 or 9 but the quality fell off a cliff after the first episode. And the pacing ruins any tension the show is trying to build. So it just goes from wacky thing to wacky thing.
This should have been a non-traditional run length with stories that needed to be longer would be longer episodes and stories that were more side stories wouldn't feel the need to maintain a full episode length. But at least then the story would be contained.
Instead this anime adaptation feels like it happens in a matter of days instead of a longer period. It's just a shame because this manga of all of Junji Ito's works deserved a faithful adaptation.
This should have been a non-traditional run length with stories that needed to be longer would be longer episodes and stories that were more side stories wouldn't feel the need to maintain a full episode length. But at least then the story would be contained.
Instead this anime adaptation feels like it happens in a matter of days instead of a longer period. It's just a shame because this manga of all of Junji Ito's works deserved a faithful adaptation.
- scorpio_2049
- Oct 17, 2024
- Permalink
Flawless First Episode but Sadly, that's it...
I'll start with praising the first episode which was absolutely flawless, chilling and so beautiful to look at as what followed was just not what you would expect.
It seamlessly begins to suck you in to this plagued town where the people's paranoia, unsettling indifference to the happenings quickly crawls under your skin.
The atmosphere is oddly very entertaining as events don't take long to escalate. It was elevated by the exceptionally creepy music by Colin Stetson which merges with the scenes so accurately, it partially creates the mood for the show.
The artstyle remains remarkably consistent and polished in almost every frame making the main characters especially the girls very pretty and attractive.
Uzumaki has been a much anticipated horror manga adaptation since its first trailer was released by Toonami in late August 2019. That alone was so chilling and eerie, which was basically a prelude to only episode 1.
But despite how good episode 1 was, its horrifying how awful the animation becomes in episodes 2 & 3... Its just so jarring and disheartening becasue you see how beautiful and perfectly paced episode 1 was, that whatever the material is in subsequent episodes, it just seems cheap and unrefined, because the quality of animation is simply gone.
Personally, I felt like I was almost watching a different anime as it has lost most of its charm, the grounded human psyche element, and had devolved into bizarre out-of-nowhere transformations that have very little substance or depth to them besides poorly rendered bodyhorror and appalment, followed by sudden scene changes without closure that destroys immersion in the story. And the art continues to get rigid and poorly rendered.
It makes these following episodes almost unwatchable and sadly a viewer may be left reeling from how bad they look in comparison to the gorgeous and perfect episode 1.
I would say Episode 1 is a must watch but after 5 Years working on 4 Episodes, they should have given the same treatment to the rest of series... 4:05am.
It seamlessly begins to suck you in to this plagued town where the people's paranoia, unsettling indifference to the happenings quickly crawls under your skin.
The atmosphere is oddly very entertaining as events don't take long to escalate. It was elevated by the exceptionally creepy music by Colin Stetson which merges with the scenes so accurately, it partially creates the mood for the show.
The artstyle remains remarkably consistent and polished in almost every frame making the main characters especially the girls very pretty and attractive.
Uzumaki has been a much anticipated horror manga adaptation since its first trailer was released by Toonami in late August 2019. That alone was so chilling and eerie, which was basically a prelude to only episode 1.
But despite how good episode 1 was, its horrifying how awful the animation becomes in episodes 2 & 3... Its just so jarring and disheartening becasue you see how beautiful and perfectly paced episode 1 was, that whatever the material is in subsequent episodes, it just seems cheap and unrefined, because the quality of animation is simply gone.
Personally, I felt like I was almost watching a different anime as it has lost most of its charm, the grounded human psyche element, and had devolved into bizarre out-of-nowhere transformations that have very little substance or depth to them besides poorly rendered bodyhorror and appalment, followed by sudden scene changes without closure that destroys immersion in the story. And the art continues to get rigid and poorly rendered.
It makes these following episodes almost unwatchable and sadly a viewer may be left reeling from how bad they look in comparison to the gorgeous and perfect episode 1.
I would say Episode 1 is a must watch but after 5 Years working on 4 Episodes, they should have given the same treatment to the rest of series... 4:05am.
- saadurrehman70
- Oct 14, 2024
- Permalink
Colin Stetson
The first episode so far has captured my attention. The animation is excellent. Like others have stated before, character development is minimal at this time, but it doesn't detract from the draw of the spirals. Hopefully more will be revealed in further episodes. The music on the other hand is something to consider. Colin Stetson is widely known for his cyclical breathing technique of the sax, bringing forth chaotic sounding arpeggios. The choice for him to make the soundtrack is completely meta considering the subject matter of the show. Goes to show how much careful thought was put into making this show. Looking forward to completing this series.
- LordJohnWhorfin
- Oct 5, 2024
- Permalink
Really good... but the pacing? Manga vs Anime ep 1.
This is a great adaption so far based off one episode. It takes about 4 or 5 chapters of the manga and tries to string them together as if they are all happening simultaneously. The two main stories in episode 1, the Dad's spiral problem and the girl with the crescent tatoo, are completed in this episode but they also throw in the spiral boy that goes to school and add some of the Mom chapter. I can already see the chapter they are going to pair the rest of the Mom story up with and I'm excited to see how they do it.
If you don't know what I'm talking about that's fine, just know these stories unlike the manga are now all being told next to eachother instead of the primary focus of each chapter that they were in the manga.
This... is an interesting choice. I think they pull it off fine. It makes more sense that these things would be going together. Unfortunately this makes the series seem rushed, and at 4 episodes you know there will be some cut content from the manga. So how much is cut in episode 1... well not much, almost everything from the first chapter is in there, but with so many things going on it feels rushed.
Animation, sound, and voice acting are all top notch, so despite me feeling the series is rushed I"m looking forward to how they weave everything together as they move on.
If you don't know what I'm talking about that's fine, just know these stories unlike the manga are now all being told next to eachother instead of the primary focus of each chapter that they were in the manga.
This... is an interesting choice. I think they pull it off fine. It makes more sense that these things would be going together. Unfortunately this makes the series seem rushed, and at 4 episodes you know there will be some cut content from the manga. So how much is cut in episode 1... well not much, almost everything from the first chapter is in there, but with so many things going on it feels rushed.
Animation, sound, and voice acting are all top notch, so despite me feeling the series is rushed I"m looking forward to how they weave everything together as they move on.
It seems like we'll never get the adaptation of Junji Ito's material we deserve.
- leonardooliva-16135
- Oct 21, 2024
- Permalink
Lacks any cohesive story
- derrickcallahan
- Oct 5, 2024
- Permalink
A Masterpiece
Yeah, all the other reviews on here saying that the show is to fast pace and that they were trying to get the show out to fast is just stupid. All that matters is that they stayed true to the Manga and they kept it in the black and white art form. The 1st episode was so good that I watched it a 2nd time to see anything different and I was amazed at how much they put into the characters and the background style. The music is amazing with the acting be superior. Honestly, I am excited to see how they do "Jack in the Box" chapter being on of my favorites with the "Butterfly" one. Super excited to see the show doing well.
- landcarbow-64956
- Sep 28, 2024
- Permalink
Is this what you've been working on for five years?
Uzumaki was the first manga I've read and upon hearing it was getting an anime adaptation back in 2019 I was excited. Especially after seing the first teaser displaying the gorgeous animation. Five years and three delays later I was kinda let down by episode 1. The pacing was waaay to fast for me to connect with the characters and for any horror to be felt. The best horror works; be it movies, games or novels takes their time and simmer up to a boil slowly when this was speeding down a highway in 200km/h covering like 3-4 chapters of the original manga in roughly 20 minutes. However the music by Colin Stetson and the previously mentioned animation work was amazing. That was when I heard that the anime only would be 4 episodes long... a bit bummed out about that I started watching episode 2. That's when I realized that Uzumaki (the anime) is a total and utter failure. Apparently a new animation studio were chosen for this episode and now the animation looks laughably cheap and bad. Like vomit in a pile of manure. And full of animation errors. I am absolutely gutted by this. One of the reasons for delaying the anime three times were, and I quote: "... we don't want to compromise its quality by delivering a mediocre final product." Oh boy, that ship has sailed. This is not a mediocre product, this is just straight up bad. Really bad. I will probably still watch episode 3 and 4, but not because I have any faith that it will be getting any better after this, but because I want to see how far down the spiral of embarrassment this actually goes.
MASTERPIECE
Despite how complicated it is to animate works by Junji Ito, this is by far the best adaptation. It's a shame the animation is very short, but those 22 minutes are enough to constantly trap you in the horror of the spiral. Sometimes the movements are slow and not related to the movement of the lips, but I think it can be improved without reducing the rating because this animation is a work of art.
This adaptation is not a substitute for the manga, but rather complements it especially for those who do not yet know the work. I hope they continue to animate more works like Tomie, Black Paradox or Hellstar Remina. From now on I guarantee the perfection of this adaptation. Congratulations!
This adaptation is not a substitute for the manga, but rather complements it especially for those who do not yet know the work. I hope they continue to animate more works like Tomie, Black Paradox or Hellstar Remina. From now on I guarantee the perfection of this adaptation. Congratulations!
- leonardoespejo
- Sep 28, 2024
- Permalink
Finally, A good adaptation of a Junji Ito manga :D
- joacoCritico
- Sep 28, 2024
- Permalink
As a newcomer, THIS WAS AMAZING
Going into this with much expectations I excepted to be disappointed but I can tell you I was not! I didn't read the manga so I was really unfamiliar with the story.
Although I didn't know it I got sucked in immediately, it was a hell of a ride. Good visuals, great voice acting and an unforgettable score. It was as unsettling as I hoped and even more, the atmosphere was amazing and it created a whole new world for me.
There are always haters who'll give it a 1/10 but I would say, Ignore them and just give it a shot. You will not be disappointed. I can't wait for the next episodes to see how the show progresses further.
Although I didn't know it I got sucked in immediately, it was a hell of a ride. Good visuals, great voice acting and an unforgettable score. It was as unsettling as I hoped and even more, the atmosphere was amazing and it created a whole new world for me.
There are always haters who'll give it a 1/10 but I would say, Ignore them and just give it a shot. You will not be disappointed. I can't wait for the next episodes to see how the show progresses further.
- thomas_bressers
- Sep 28, 2024
- Permalink
Don't trust the good reviews
Most of the good reviews are of the 1st ep. Which by itself, wasn't that good considering the pretty bad pacing, the only thing that saved it was the music and animation. The second ep is out now and oh boy... the pacing... is absolutely terrible, even worse than the 1st, they skip chapters like I skip my homework. They just put creepy scene after creepy scene after creepy scene witouth much care of how they each play with each other, its almost like they're just trying to meet the quota or notebook checking what creepy scenes they got to include, instead of trying to make any kind of buildup to make them actually work. The animation took a real nosedive too, and this is all on ep2... (to note that the anime has 4 eps only and was postponed like 3 times or something...) how is this even possible, did they waste all their budget on ep 1?
I will be watching the final 2 eps, but honestly, I just really hope that I'm wrong and they didn't waste all their budget on ep 1 animation.......... damn, I'm really disappointed.
I will be watching the final 2 eps, but honestly, I just really hope that I'm wrong and they didn't waste all their budget on ep 1 animation.......... damn, I'm really disappointed.
Perfect Adapation
A stunning adaption.
I've watched a few Junji Ito anime adaptions over the years, and they range from garbage to pure swill.
This one is different - clearly the team behind Uzumaki 2024 respects the material it came from.
There is no colour which mirrors the look of the original manga.
The soundtrack is 100% perfect. It encapsulates the stress and terror of the spirals as they overtake the town.
Animation is beautiful - it's a combination of hand drawn and CGI, the combination equals a stunning synergy that is as close to the manga as it gets.
Voice acting is stellar, and the plot is compelling - it moves at a very fast pace (compared to the super-lengthy original material) but it's no less creepy compelling.
Try it, you'll love it.
I've watched a few Junji Ito anime adaptions over the years, and they range from garbage to pure swill.
This one is different - clearly the team behind Uzumaki 2024 respects the material it came from.
There is no colour which mirrors the look of the original manga.
The soundtrack is 100% perfect. It encapsulates the stress and terror of the spirals as they overtake the town.
Animation is beautiful - it's a combination of hand drawn and CGI, the combination equals a stunning synergy that is as close to the manga as it gets.
Voice acting is stellar, and the plot is compelling - it moves at a very fast pace (compared to the super-lengthy original material) but it's no less creepy compelling.
Try it, you'll love it.
- DrumheadofSpace
- Sep 30, 2024
- Permalink
Junji Ito deserves better
- chenp-54708
- Oct 19, 2024
- Permalink
A Good Pre-Halloween Treat.
The right treatment for Junji Ito's work. This anime adaptation feels like anime pages come to life, capturing the eerie and bizarre atmosphere of Junji Ito's original work. The animation mirrors the unsettling and surreal tone of the manga, drawing you deeper into the story with each twist-literally. Also, the score by Colin Stetson (Hereditary) is a standout, complementing the visuals and enhancing the creepy, off-kilter feel (Whoever chose him to do the score for this anime knows how to do their job right). It's an incredibly effective piece of horror and a must-watch for fans of horror and anime this upcoming Halloween.
- bad_santa_23
- Sep 29, 2024
- Permalink
This review is for the entire series which just ended and was incredible.
In 2019, Adult Swim/Toonami released the trailer for Uzumaki and it may very well be one of the greatest trailers of all time. Haunting music, small pieces of what the show would be about, and a release date of sometime in 2020. It was confirmed that it would be rotoscoped animation for the entire series.
Rotoscoping is a time-consuming form of animation where real-life actors are recorded making movements and then every single frame is painstakingly illustrated over which creates an incredibly surreal and beautiful effect. With 24 frames per second, one minute of rotoscoped animation is 1440 unique frames of animation. With four episodes with a total of about 140 minutes of animation - this would be 201,600 unique frames. Now obviously there are going to be shots where things are not moving, so it is likely that the original rotoscope frames for the show would be in the ballpark of 150,000 unique frames of rotoscoped animation.
Then the Covid-19 pandemic happened and the show went into development hell. For five years, Uzumaki remained not cancelled, but had no release date. There were several teasers, but there was a high likelihood it would be cancelled. The HBO/Discovery merger, which included Adult Swim/Toonami, saw dozens of great shows cancelled and people believed it was only a matter of time before Uzumaki suffered the same fate. Then in summer of 2024, a release date was finally given for all four episodes in September/October.
Let's get the animation issues out of the way because the way the community has lambasted this show is ridiculous. Arm chair animators who have no idea the amount of work that went into this show are giving it low scores and become the vocal minority of people who do not realize that without the changes in the final version, the show would have never been released.
Episode one is fully rotoscoped and this was likely finished prior to Covid-19. Episodes 2-4 are partially rotoscoped, however there is a decline in animation quality in a number of parts. Without these concessions, the show would never have been released. The animation is still very well done in the majority of episodes 2-4 and, though there are some parts that were obviously scaled back, the show still overall is animated better than the majority of animated shows.
The average viewer will not notice the animation changes in episodes 2-4 and it is so disappointing to see people not be able to see that the changes were needed to get the show out of development hell and released.
Uzumaki's plot, characters, setting, everything is 10/10. There is NOTHING ELSE like this show. It is incredibly original and absolutely haunting. It's a 10/10 show and I'm not going into the plot because I want the reader of this to go into the show without knowing much because it is just that good.
Uzumaki is a masterpiece, with part of the masterpiece being that it ACTUALLY RELEASED. 10/10.
Rotoscoping is a time-consuming form of animation where real-life actors are recorded making movements and then every single frame is painstakingly illustrated over which creates an incredibly surreal and beautiful effect. With 24 frames per second, one minute of rotoscoped animation is 1440 unique frames of animation. With four episodes with a total of about 140 minutes of animation - this would be 201,600 unique frames. Now obviously there are going to be shots where things are not moving, so it is likely that the original rotoscope frames for the show would be in the ballpark of 150,000 unique frames of rotoscoped animation.
Then the Covid-19 pandemic happened and the show went into development hell. For five years, Uzumaki remained not cancelled, but had no release date. There were several teasers, but there was a high likelihood it would be cancelled. The HBO/Discovery merger, which included Adult Swim/Toonami, saw dozens of great shows cancelled and people believed it was only a matter of time before Uzumaki suffered the same fate. Then in summer of 2024, a release date was finally given for all four episodes in September/October.
Let's get the animation issues out of the way because the way the community has lambasted this show is ridiculous. Arm chair animators who have no idea the amount of work that went into this show are giving it low scores and become the vocal minority of people who do not realize that without the changes in the final version, the show would have never been released.
Episode one is fully rotoscoped and this was likely finished prior to Covid-19. Episodes 2-4 are partially rotoscoped, however there is a decline in animation quality in a number of parts. Without these concessions, the show would never have been released. The animation is still very well done in the majority of episodes 2-4 and, though there are some parts that were obviously scaled back, the show still overall is animated better than the majority of animated shows.
The average viewer will not notice the animation changes in episodes 2-4 and it is so disappointing to see people not be able to see that the changes were needed to get the show out of development hell and released.
Uzumaki's plot, characters, setting, everything is 10/10. There is NOTHING ELSE like this show. It is incredibly original and absolutely haunting. It's a 10/10 show and I'm not going into the plot because I want the reader of this to go into the show without knowing much because it is just that good.
Uzumaki is a masterpiece, with part of the masterpiece being that it ACTUALLY RELEASED. 10/10.
- badcgishark
- Oct 19, 2024
- Permalink
It's so well done and Junji Ito stans must see
Uzumaki is one of my favorites. This is so well done and it's truly like watching art move. The way they've animated the actual manga scenes is insane. It's so beautiful m. I'm not sure why people are talking about pacing but just ignore them. You can't fix ignorance. You can't complain about pace when everybody has read the book differently. I suppose some humans need things done slower for them too, like cutting food. The music is pretty good and matches the various moods of Uzumaki. I'm really blown away by how they've animated everything. It's almost creepier with the animated. The English VAs aren't bad either. All in all I absolutely love it and can see all the hard work that's gone into this project. Any Junji Ito fan must see.
Moving Way Too Fast
So let me start off by saying, I am unfamiliar with the manga. I don't know a single clue about the storyline so I went in blind.
Let me start off with the positives. The animation is top tier. It seems like it would be easy to pull you in and the atmosphere is really great. The storyline itself seems really interesting, and it was enough to make me continue watching.
As for the rest, I'd have to agree with others when I say it's moving too fast. Halfway through the episode it lost momentum. You don't get to know the characters or anything before the story starts moving forward. From what I've seen, they crammed a few chapters into one 20 minute episode, and you can really tell. I'm going to continue because I'm intrigued, but if they slowed down the pacing, it would make for a more atmospheric and more enjoyable experience.
Let me start off with the positives. The animation is top tier. It seems like it would be easy to pull you in and the atmosphere is really great. The storyline itself seems really interesting, and it was enough to make me continue watching.
As for the rest, I'd have to agree with others when I say it's moving too fast. Halfway through the episode it lost momentum. You don't get to know the characters or anything before the story starts moving forward. From what I've seen, they crammed a few chapters into one 20 minute episode, and you can really tell. I'm going to continue because I'm intrigued, but if they slowed down the pacing, it would make for a more atmospheric and more enjoyable experience.
- onlinefroot
- Sep 30, 2024
- Permalink
A relentless descent into madness down a Fibonacci staircase
- quantumphyzx
- Oct 20, 2024
- Permalink
Genuinely what was episode 2
If you're watching this based on the animation in the trailer, don't
I would've rated this a eight or nine before I watched episode two (eight or nine because it was a small bit to fast in the pace) but the animation in episode one saved it. Episode two on the other hand... the animation was horrible, there's a scene where characters are running and the sliding across the ground was so bad, genuinely why do companies and studios think it's a good idea to cut cost and time just to make a quick buck?? If you want to make money make a genuinely good show that people will want to watch. I was so excited because the trailer was amazingly animated and it captured the style of junji ito well. Now it's closer to something like "The Junji Ito collection" if you know how awful that show was.
I would've rated this a eight or nine before I watched episode two (eight or nine because it was a small bit to fast in the pace) but the animation in episode one saved it. Episode two on the other hand... the animation was horrible, there's a scene where characters are running and the sliding across the ground was so bad, genuinely why do companies and studios think it's a good idea to cut cost and time just to make a quick buck?? If you want to make money make a genuinely good show that people will want to watch. I was so excited because the trailer was amazingly animated and it captured the style of junji ito well. Now it's closer to something like "The Junji Ito collection" if you know how awful that show was.
- cattuirseach
- Oct 10, 2024
- Permalink
Warts and all
It's not perfect but It's hands down the best Juninho adaptation I've seen personally, and despite its flaws it is groundbreaking. The animation style of black and white is absolutely stand out and I'd love to see more of it other places. There are a lot of people complaining about dips in quality but it's nothing beyond what I've seen in other anime. And despite its low animation points it's high are worth it especially if you're a fan of the manga, those clips you see on social media are 5 seconds of a 30 minute episode. I think the issue is obviously corporations cutting budgets but also that they had to adapt small panels your eye spends less than a second on from the book and make it a full screen thing, that combined with a limited run time means that small panel you look at for less than a second and was incidental and the large full page or double page panels in the book are the same size and have the same amount of screen time. That being said they hit all the marks for me, we can nitpick all day but I don't think dunking on a project that pays so much respect to the source material is worthwhile, it's clear the team that worked on this cared deeply and respects its fans. I'd also like to defend the pacing of the story, the manga does not have very good pacing either it's just really well drawn when it needs to be. I thought the chronology of everything happening at the same time made a lot more sense than the one by one. Plus the manga is goofy as hell people are riding tornados and eating snail people turning into spiral blobs. I think this adaptation is about as good as it gets. It's accurate it's concise any complaints people have are more industry complaints that are valid but it should be acknowledged that they are the industry not the art.
Top shelf! Fulfilling fidelity to manga
I finished episode 3, and I'm a fan of the original manga - which this series nails. Like others, I found the first episode quick - but I see that as a creative choice to immerse the viewer quickly. It slows wonderfully. The second episode dotes on macabre detail, the third lingers in horrific circumstances you'll beg to leave - the prime objective of an Uzumaki adaptation. The art is perfect, I've never witnessed such fulfilling fidelity to original still image style. Colin Stetson's music style is perfect for the soundtrack.
I am thankful for Japanese audio with subtitles, that's what feels right to me. The voice acting is as good as it gets.
Wow, am I ever nauseous and revolted after that third episode! Yay!!!
I am thankful for Japanese audio with subtitles, that's what feels right to me. The voice acting is as good as it gets.
Wow, am I ever nauseous and revolted after that third episode! Yay!!!
- brendan-hemens
- Oct 13, 2024
- Permalink