Usually I try to find some good points in an any but there just weren't any for me this time around. ![]() If there is a third season I doubt I'll bother watching it. This did not leave me hanging out for more. If you were looking for a continuance of some of the romances and rivalries don't bother, they pretty much continue on as they were when the first season left off. That's really the only way you can put it. There's an extremely weird ending too.Īll character development ended with the first season. There is also a whole lot more ecchi this time around, which is fine for some, however it looks as though they exchanged any pretense of a storyline for more fanservice. From then on it is pretty much half a series of random mini However this was all over by the fifth or sixth episode and to be honest it wasn't even very satisfying. The second season started out with some semblance of a plot, a goal if you will. I thoroughly enjoyed it and if you did as well then don't bother with the second season. There were interesting relationships between the characters and some character development. In the first season there was your usual beginning, middle and end. To put it simply I was disappointed with this second series, it shouldn't have even been made. Seikon No Qwaser II ended up becoming a giant boob-sucking travesty, rather than a form of entertainment. I rated this a 6 because the story lacked any real meat, there was hardly any action or development of the plot, the characters were static, and almost everything was sugar-coated with filler episodes. Only one character from Surei Academy appears throughout the remainder of the episodes, but her appearances are primarily reserved for Ekaterina. New characters emerge from the foreground, but are eventually shouldered to the side after the recovery of the Magdalena of Thunder this, despite the maturation of the characters. What has developed between the main characters in the first series stays relatively stagnant throughout the production. Aside from the goofy and unnecessary fan-service of the show, there were hardly any slots open for serious character interaction. If anything, the ending OP adds to what the anime is trying to define as the atmosphere of the show.ĬHARACTER :: Not much development, if very minimal. On the contrary, "Metaphor" by Shoujo Byou, the ending theme, is my favorite from the Seikon series by far. ![]() Upbeat, funky, and melancholy, the song "Rasen, Arui wa Seinaru Yokubou" by Faylan was well done, but definitely does NOT compare to the first season’s “Baptize” OP. SOUND :: I highly enjoyed the opening and ending themes. The detail of the characters and their wardrobe has improved since the last season, but the background is still rather average. A few times, the author had failed to correlate speech with lip movement in minor scenes or forgot to draw a movement to a sound, but nothing too serious. Most of the action and deepening of the plot took place within the last 24 minutes of the series, leaving yet another cliffhanger at the end.ĪRT :: The art of the show was the same as the previous season's. The last episode was engaging and yet, it felt somewhat rushed. ![]() A little fan-service is good, yes, but it became more of a hassle to finish the series as the show very slowly progressed. It felt as though in every episode, the mangaka left a pair of boobs lying around purely for the sake of his viewers to sit around and gawk at them. Unfortunately, the clusterfuck of fan-service actually killed the plot of the show. You want breasts of every shape and size? YOU'VE GOT IT. You want boobies that jiggle for no reason? YOU'VE GOT IT! Every now and again, a character would slightly develop or would come to a sudden realization surrounded by a clusterfuck of fan-service. Most of the episodes were fillers with no real intention to further the plot of the story. This is where the show really began to nose dive into a downward spiral - and frankly, suicide! Until the episodes following the sixth just begin to drag. Members of the Adepts start to show up to complicate matters and things begin to get heated as the presence of the Magdalena of Thunder is revealed to be inside the Academy, hidden deep beneath the flesh of a young woman. various backgrounds to attend the Academy. Sounds interesting, right? In the first six episodes, Sasha is dressed as a woman in an all girls school where the technology to expand and focus your mind has been used as a way to bait girls of However, the continuation of the series (Seikon No Qwaser II) follows Sasha and Hana as they search for the Magdalena of Thunder, supposedly inactive and hiding within a girl at the Roman Curia Surei Academy. The first season of Seikon No Qwaser started out great and ended with a decent cliffhanger.
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