Thursday, April 17, 2014
Spring Anime 2014 (Part 5)
Title: No Game No Life
Release Date: April 9, 2014
Studio: Madhouse
Genre: Fantasy, Psychological, Comedy
Premise: Sora and Shiro, a brother and sister pair of hikikomori NEETs that excel at online games, reign undefeated under the moniker "BLANK." After defeating a mysterious opponent, they are transported to an alternate reality where everything from petty disputes to national borders is decided by playing games.
Verdict: This is the latest in a line of popular "socially awkward loner gets sucked into favorite game" series that have popped up. First came Sword Art Online and Btooom! in 2012, followed by last year's Log Horizon. It's easy to see why shows like these would appeal to members of Japanese society's robust gaming otaku subculture. The protagonists of these series are usually quiet, withdrawn, unproductive members of society, gaming to escape their mundane realities.
When they wind up living their favorite pastime, they usually react with elation - here their formerly useless skills are suddenly invaluable, the countless hours spent honing odd abilities finally bearing fruit. However, at the end of the day, all of these slackers-turned-heroes try to return home. At the end of the pilot, our fearless protagonist Sora notes this trope and proceeds to do away with it completely: "Why would they try to go back to a world like that?"
This is the mentality with which Sora and his sister approach life, scorning the outside world, sunlight and other people. They play online games from sun-up to sundown, subsisting on rations and convenience store food. The pair is on the tail end of a five-day gaming bender when they receive a strange invite from an anonymous source online. After a pitched battle of computer chess, brother and sister are whisked away to Disboard - world ruled by gaming. Sora and Shiro waste no time diving into their new environment, traveling to a town where a new king is being determined via poker game.
The fantastical setting, and Shiro and Sora's nonchalant, devil-may-care reaction to it, is very intriguing. It also doesn't hurt when a studio as world-renowned as Madhouse is handling animation duties; even the most mundane games become suspenseful action sequences. It will be interesting to follow this series and see what shenanigans Sora and his sister get up to in their new digs.
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