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Monkey D. Luna • 1 year ago

I waited for this version... and I got a whole episode of wholesomeness... not that I'm complainin'... good clean wholesome fun is good. T_T

Waverly_ppl • 1 year ago

There wasn’t a noticeable difference between uncensored and censored both are very wholesome

Because he is a Little girl should he go to school I meant She go back to school

Cowboy Henk • 1 year ago

being hugged into boobs gotta love that sensation

Waverly_ppl • 1 year ago

Yeah…

Düölingöhhh Snorlax • 1 year ago

I reallyyy like the fashion in this :o It's surprisingly cute'n'chic :3

My man's constantly dripped out, like, damn bro, I didn't know you were fresh like that. No need for chilling, since you're clearly the freshest squid in the fish market. It's genuinely surprising just how hard his outfits go every episode. It's like Wataten all over again

悲しい犬 • 1 year ago

Marketing guy: "I think I know a way to double the audience..."

SenicAsianRoute • 1 year ago

if your joking about yuri am gonna thump your head

悲しい犬 • 1 year ago

Erhm nope.

Helaling • 1 year ago

You mean the Uncensored part?

悲しい犬 • 1 year ago

Yep, as many people has already commented, it's pretty pointless to have two versions of this particular anime.

Well F*ck... • 1 year ago

Then ends with cliffhanger

SenicAsianRoute • 1 year ago

welcome to cartoons

Well F*ck... • 1 year ago

This is anime...

SenicAsianRoute • 1 year ago

anime is cartoon
same with Donghua

Knight of Carrion • 1 year ago

Cartoon are for children. I havent seen this anime but from what I have heard this is definitely not for children

>Cartoon are for children.
So is anime.

A shortage of lollypops • 1 year ago

There are so many counter examples to this that I don't even know where to start. Made in Abyss, Re:Zero, and Redo of Healer are big ones that most people have seen; would you let a child watch any of those? Literally most of anime is completely unfit for child consumption.

The Half-Guinness Genie • 1 year ago

Captain Scarlet & the Mysterons literally has at least one violent, bloody death in it every single episode and that was explicitly made for kids. One of the early episodes, White as Snow, features a sailor who gets stuck outside a submarine and struggles and drowns as it submerges. The titular character himself dies twice in the first episode, once in a car crash and the second falling off a building after being shot, both with blood; Hell Captain Brown explodes in an attempt to assassinate the World President it's complicated, don't ask and that's not even mentioning the opening narration that explains how the aliens operate, which itself is borderline Eldritch horror.
Children in the 60s, 70s, 80s and even my brother and I watched this show, adored it and wound up as well adjusted members of society. As far as I can see, there is nothing in the anime you listed that would be unsuitable for children except maybe Redo of Healer, violent sexual content is where I draw a hard line and even going by your logic, I wouldn't consider Princess Mononoke fit for child consumption yet I saw it's latter quarter when I was around 8 or 9 and only wanted to see more.

Fun fact, though, Captain Scarlet and the rest of Gerry & Silvia Anderson's works actually influenced much of anime in the 70s and 80s, with Hideaki Anno going so far as to cite the Andersons' works as inspirations for his own productions and even so it's just self-evident, Tokyo-3 is obviously modelled after Marine City and the Space Plane in Gunbuster is clearly Fireflash so even in a long, roundabout way, yes, anime is for kids.

A shortage of lollypops • 1 year ago

aight, I'll call it here with agree to disagree; but one thing this made me realize is that imdb has entries for anime. for some reason I only think of it for movies, but apparently they've got everything there. I deff. agree that there's no need to shelter kids from senseless violence, the reason I chose re:zero and mia was for the gradually ratcheting horror; idk but they feel worse to me than the senseless violence of things like symphogear or kill la kill. imdb lists all four as tv-14, with healer at tv-ma. typically the argument "__ is for kids" is more of "was made with the intended audience being kids" rather than "kids are able to watch it without their heads exploding." like, I would call peppa pig or spongebob "for kids," but not, idk, the mona lisa.

The Half-Guinness Genie • 1 year ago

There is no agreeing to disagree, the only resolutions are to agree or be wrong.

>the reason I chose re:zero and mia was for the gradually ratcheting horror
So? Captain Scarlet is horrific from the start. The Mysteron city is creepy to all Hell, their whole schtick is that they reanimate the dead and destroyed for their purposes, their modus operandi is literally terrorism to annihilate humanity - Colonel White even dubs it a War of Nerves - and they even win on occasions.
Granted, it's not the most consistently horrific thing in the world, but then there's Doctor Who which is infinitely more so: Weeping Angels, Cybermen, Daleks and even the settings of Silence of the Library, the Doctor's Daughter, the Rebel Flesh, Waters of Mars et al are nightmare material despite being a family show. Re:Zero and Maiden Abyss are practically for preschoolers in comparison.
>but they feel worse to me than the senseless violence of things like symphogear or kill la kill
Da fuq are you talking about, Symphogear and Kill La Kill are incredibly benign when it comes to their violence. Hell, Kill La Kill is ultimately no different than Power Rangers and I'd offer Symphogear as an alternative to Sailor Moon.
>imdb lists all four as tv-14, with healer at tv-ma
Cool, but what does that mean in English?

>typically the argument [blah blah blah]
And again, Captain Scarlet was explicitly made for children. Not young adults, not teenagers, children and yet it's the second most gratuitously violent property I can think of next to Attack On Titan, with an equal amount of political theming to boot.
>like, I would call peppa pig or spongebob "for kids,"
There's more to children's programming than just happy baby bullshit, you know.
>but not, idk, the mona lisa
Right, sure, like the epitome of art is an apt comparison to make in a discussion about silly moving pictures. The most you should've cited was Dogs Playing Poker.

A shortage of lollypops • 1 year ago

hai, hai; I guess I'll just resolve to be wrong then. most of this I have no comment on, but there's a few things you misinterpreted. re: symphogear & kill la kill, you literally interpreted my argument as the opposite of what I actually said. re: what does that mean in english, the parental rating of the four shows I had discussed previously in the comment were listed as tv-14 on the internet movie database commonly known as imdb. healer was listed as tv-ma. this is roughly consistent with your argument, as long as you count 15 as a child. re: mona lisa, idk, I was just spouting out some random media which is generally believed to be made for adults. the point was that just because it's inoffensive doesn't mean that it's made for kids. feel free to replace it with whatever example you want.

The Half-Guinness Genie • 1 year ago

Then what did you actually say? I don't see how else to interpret it.

A shortage of lollypops • 1 year ago

wait, I was just going to upvote your comments because I had enjoyed this exchange, but I just saw; how do you have 14k comments and no upvotes? do downvotes count against your total, or have you really never said anything that anyone has agreed with in your entire history of 14k comments? if so, that's kind of impressive...

A shortage of lollypops • 1 year ago

quote "I deff. agree that there's no need to shelter kids from senseless violence, the reason I chose re:zero and mia was for the gradually ratcheting horror; idk but they feel worse to me than the senseless violence of things like symphogear or kill la kill." here I first said that "senseless violence" has no need for censorship, then went on to provide an example. for the first example, I used re:zero and mia, and posited that they have more of a "gradually ratcheting horror" as opposed to "senseless violence" and for this reason are less acceptable for children to be watching. for the second example, I said symphogear and kill la kill were just "senseless violence" and thus have less reason to be hidden from children. what I think has happened is that you have interpreted the phrase "senseless violence" as a value judgement against the violence occurring in these shows, rather than how I intended it as a type of violence which is not treated with seriousness by the show. for example, you could think of three separate shows which handle the death of a character differently: one kills the character offscreen, moving on with a smaller cast after some amount of grieving; senseless violence as I used it here would be putting the death on-screen; and what I called "gradually ratcheting horror" (terrible phrasing, ik, but can't think of anything better) would be bringing consequences to the other characters in to it - letting them be complicit in the death and showing how deeply it affects them, or having the actions of the cast lead to a death and having them watch it, or having the cast watch a slow and inevitable death of a close friend caused by a malicious character they were unsuccessful in stopping. the physical acts aren't why I would wouldn't recommend the show to a child, it's the show's response to the violence and how seriously consequences are taken. like, irl, genocide is objectively worse than murder, but if a show takes the time to make a murder personal, that can flip on its head.

an aside; my eyes just passed over this the first time I read it, but "Maiden Abyss?" are you using dictation software to write these? (if so which one,,, I've never seen one which handles punctuation well)

The Half-Guinness Genie • 1 year ago

Okay, I see what went wrong. The way you phrased it made me think the content after the semi-colon (with the use of idk) was a separate line of thinking. Also I interpreted "senseless violence" as gratuitous violence and "gradually ratcheting horror" as... well, WYSIWYG, especially since I'm used to kid's programming having such elements see The Transformers: The Movie. More apt terms probably would've been inconsequential action and escalating consequences or increasing awareness of stakes. Maybe, idk, I don't hold your position.

>are you using dictation software to write these?
No, I just like to be obtuse sometimes. Back when the show was new we frequently misheard Made in Abyss as Maiden Abyss because many people have poor enunciation. I think it's funny to throw people off with minor elements like this (e.g. referring to American Football as Gridder, as a play on the Football/Soccer debate) and it keeps me engaged.

>do downvotes count against your total?
Yes, but you need a lot to counteract it. Mine were lost because a chatroom I previously frequented was hit by a downdoot bot and all our updoots were lost. The only option to recover them was to create a new profile but I honestly don't mind.

SenicAsianRoute • 1 year ago

That is like saying animation is just for kids

Scramler • 1 year ago

So Suisei was a hairdresser, I wonder what Miko works as

Kino • 1 year ago

It's her sister,Suisei uses axe instead

Phil • 1 year ago

Wait didn’t I watch this

Jack Schmit • 1 year ago

You watched censored version. IDK if there is any changed parts in the uncensored version.

Waverly_ppl • 1 year ago

Yeah this one is 4 days late but I don’t know why it is.

Waverly_ppl • 1 year ago

Oh this finally released.

Püddin • 1 year ago

The name should have been: oniichan onanoka

I mean that works too, but get feeling he will be stuck like that forever so Oniichan wa Oshimai works

Superb Villain Veigar • 1 year ago

So does that mean she will be going to school?

SenicAsianRoute • 1 year ago

Yup It was shown off in the trailer

Noah Winns-Cromer • 1 year ago

Bout bloody time we got the cultured version of Onimai!

...days later.

SenicAsianRoute • 1 year ago

its not cultured really thou

Waverly_ppl • 1 year ago

Yeah I was so confused.

~YajLa~ • 10 months ago

Wow... Seeing him/her progressing in his/her character development is so heart warming~

Anime Freak • 1 year ago

Who theres soooo much uncensoring happening in this show. Its no surprised they censored so much in the other version. Woooooooow xD

trash • 1 year ago

This anime is like ReLIFE, version 2.

Etrancical • 1 year ago

Mahiro is really living out the dream. I wish I could be reborn as a girl. I wanna have that sorta kinship with other women (not the pervy kind). Y'all just genuinely bond so much better and I feel so left out cause I was born a guy.

Next best thing is to trick some women into thinking I am a woman, i guess

Rob • 1 year ago

I need to get a haircut and a shampoo NOW.

Zachary M Erickson • 1 year ago

You're actually leaving the house for once ಥ﹏ಥ?
MY EYES LOOK HUGE! That's anime for ya.
GOMENESAIIII!
7:20 How did she get out of that situation?
I like how the hair salon girl has a missing toof.
WHAT DID SHE DO TO ME?! I think she looks great.
16:25 Now that's a nice outfit ;3.
How could you not like pumpkin? It makes good pie, coffee, and even soup.
Are parents ever home in anime? This seems unrealistic.

Kino • 1 year ago

Uncensored Cunny is back

Kranesh • 1 year ago

So it did had an uncensored episode! That's a relief and I'm glad I didn't watched the original as I was waiting for this version.

Overall a good episode, Mahiro is indeed having more development even tho he's still trapped in the shell of the home security officer, makes me wonder if him going back to school will be what he needs in order to finally stop being a NEET.

Also, I really hope we get an onsen episode for more glorious gainaxing!

Waverly_ppl • 1 year ago

Lol this one was released 4 days after episode 5 was meant to.