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Btooom!

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BTOOOM!@blogalacon1270d
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4 more reviews

  1. Anime Review: BTOOOM!@thatanimesnob3009d

    PREMISE

    Oh look, another series about an antisocial hero who is very good at videogames. Could it be that it is aiming at a specific type of viewers? Whatever the answer is, here comes yet another show about some waste of life who does nothing but playing videogames all day, and is all of a sudden thrown in a life or death situation, where we are supposed to cheer for him, despite being a total jerk. It’s about a videogame that is something between Counterstrike and Bomberman, getting real after the protagonist is sent to fight other players. Then it becomes Battle Royale in a Predators setting, meaning, a bunch of people that need to kill each other, sent via parachute to a remote tropical island. And yes it sounds interesting at first, until you see how silly it plays out.

    NO REALISM

    Of course and you need to have some suspension of disbelief when watching a fictional work, but this anime is constantly begging you to point your finger at it and yell THAT CAN’T HAPPEN. The laws of physics make absolutely no sense. When a bomb explodes right next to you, you will be hurt from the noise, the shrapnel, and the shock wave no matter how many times you flip in the air. Also, an explosion has a radius of several meters and is definitely way more than just a few square centimetres around it. So imagine how silly it looks when a dozen bombs explode all around the protagonist and he remains perfectly fine, even when he is a sitting duck. Of course this weird phenomenon occurs only for the protagonist, while everybody else dies in one hit. For a show that keeps telling you it is about

    It is impossible to be immersed in the series, and it’s not because lots of improbable things keeps happening. One of my favourite anime is Hokuto no Ken where people explode like balloons and the script is full of nonsense. The thing that makes all the difference between that and BTOOOM is that it never tries to make a distinction between reality and fiction. They never say “That is a videogame and is fake, while this is a death game and is real. When you make separations like these, it’s like you are demanding from the viewer to think about it, thus making it far easier to spot the improbabilities and realize the so called "real" death games, are as fake as playing a videogame.

    • When someone gets blown up to pieces, you can take his remaining bombs that miraculously don’t blow up along with him. Sweet, extra ammo from enemy drops, this videogame is nice... Oh wait, this is not a videogame but a realistic death game… Supposed.
    • When you throw a videogame controller at a wall, it is the plastic controller that breaks and not the brick wall.
    • Each player has a sonar device on his hand that allows him to know where the others are. The sonar is cancelled if someone else is using it at the exact same time. The chances of that happening are one in a thousand since the margin of error is less than a second and yet the protagonist pulls it off ten times in a row, while running.
    • His opponent doesn’t need the sonar in order to find the protagonist, since he is running around him while making noise as he passes through thick foliage. He may not see him but he can clearly hear him.
    • Most of the bombs are using fringe science and thus costs a fortune. Adding to the expenses the costs of sending messages to those that want people abducted and transferred to the island, while keeping the whole thing completely secret from public, means that they waste the annual budgets of a dozen major countries, just for the entertainment of a few rich people.
    • Continuity errors such as people disappearing for no given reason, or teleporting instantly to impossible places.
    • Giant man eating lizards appear out of nowhere. Because WHY NOT?
    • Constant flashbacks from just a few episodes ago, to waste time and further remind us of all the stupid things in this show.
    • And add to all that, the story is left incomplete, so nothing is really resolved.

    AWFUL CHARACTERS

    Since the script is so bad, the characters suffer from it as well. It would be interesting just to see how each of them would react in a life or death situation, but because of the videogame logic the show uses, it makes them act stupid and the drama surrounding them doesn’t work one bit. The protagonist for example is being rewritten every 5 minutes. It’s impossible to tell what his personality is, since he acts completely different in every scene. And no, it’s not because he adjusts to the situation he is in; he LITERALLY becomes a different person depending on how the plot wants him to behave.

    • Throwing bombs at defenseless players who don’t even try to fight back does not prove how great of a player the protagonist is.
    • In one scene he knows how to use bombs, in another he doesn’t. He realized how a timer bomb works only five times after he tried it, even though he was playing the game for years.
    • In one scene he is anti-social and angry, in the other he is very social and polite.
    • In one scene he acts as a leader figure, in the other like a dork who can’t even walk without tripping.
    • In one scene he is cunning and sets traps to his opponents, in the other he gets surprised when he witnesses the exact same trap being used on someone else.
    • A NEET like him can’t possibly be so athletic. He was doing nothing but sitting in his house for years and yet can outrun or counterattack instantly people with far greater stamina and skills than him. It may have worked in a videogame by pressing buttons really fast, but in reality he wouldn’t be able to even run for 5 seconds without getting exhausted.

    In a similar way, every other character has two lines of a personality, and even those are presented in an extreme way. They are all way too evil, or way too stupid, to the point they are indeed like videogame caricatures and not real people taking place in a real death game.

    • The deuteragonist for example is a sexy blonde school girl, which makes all people around her to wanna rape her on first sight. Because that is what happens in REAL life. She is the main source of fan service and the animators never miss the chance to zoom on her privates. As for her personality, it is also rewritten based on the demands on the script. She is supposed to be afraid of men, unless the plot says she needs to trust them right away, so they can betray her. Then she will not trust men thereafter, until the plot needs to trust them immediately once more.
    • The protagonist’s mother was the one who wanted her son to be sent to the death game because he was mean to her. Because that is what parents do when their kids are impolite; they send them to be killed in some sadistic game instead of seeking help from any one of the thousands of humanitarian organizations out there.
    • The blond chick on the other hand was chosen by her best friends. There was an incident where they got raped, but she escaped, called the police, caught the rapists, and saved their lives. As thanks, they believed she should have stayed and gotten the same treatment like the best friend she was supposed to be, instead of the UNFORGIVABLE act of not letting them die by doing nothing. That makes sense.

    IN CONCLUSION

    I almost feel sorry of all the money studio Madhouse wasted on making this thing. It looks gorgeous and feels far more realistic compared to your average anime. I can even place it next to Death Note in terms of atmosphere and cinematics. Many secondary characters have some really ridiculous pitches to their voice, that made them sound very retarded, but other than that it looks great and makes you wish that was the only thing that was bad in this show. It is just another stupid anime ala Deadman Wonderland or Future Diary. Just nonsense and edgy violence for low tier pop corn entertainment. And it fails even at that because it keeps telling you it is not a videogame but a REAL death game.

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  2. Btooom! animation review blog@suresheee3105d

    image n the blink of the mind's eye, Ryouta Sakamoto suddenly finds himself transported from playing the hit Btoom! video game to being stranded on a mysterious island, equipped with a day's worth of provisions, a bag of bombs, a strange crystal embedded in his left hand and a huge gaping hole in his memory. But it doesn't take long to figure out what's going on, especially after the first person Ryouta meets tries to kill him. Someone is attempting to recreate the ultra-violent Btoom! game in real life, and the island has been filled with an army of other unwilling players, each armed with one of the multiple variants of explosive weapons called BIM. Fortunately, Ryouta's an ace Btoom! player, but this insane version of the game has no reset switch or second lives, and there's only one way off the island: kill seven other people before they can kill you! Can Ryouta repurpose his game based skills fast enough to survive? Read more at http://myanimelist.net/anime/14345/Btooom!#PDIkG8vVZ1RUqScG.99 less Category: Dubbed Anime Status: Completed Released: 2012 Rating:9.45 Genres: Action, Psychological, Sci-Fi, Seinen

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  3. [Anime] BTOOOM! When the virtual joins the reality@redanime3274d

    btoom-anime-fi.jpg BOOOM! Oh no I meant BTOOOM! This anime bears his name well (hence my introduction foireuse) because it speaks mainly of Bomb! When I speak of bomb, I do not speak of Japanese sexy, but rather stuff that make BOOM.

    I'm only going to present you the season 1. It is part for a tour of this anime including 12 episodes decoiffant!


    History of BTOOOM!

    Btooom! Is a manga written and drawn by Junya Inoue. Btooom! It was adapted in anime in 2012.

    This is the story of Ryota Sakamoto, a young Japanese gamer who, as you guessed, spends his time playing! Ranked 10th in the game BTOOOM! He was taken away by men in black. When he wakes up, he finds himself on an island alone and this is where the game begins. He finds himself in a real hunt for the man and all organized by the creative company of the game.

    Not all participants are BTOOOM players! They are chosen because they have been nominated by a person from their entourage. It is important to signify it because it gives depth to the character of the protagonists who will be on the way to Ryota. We can follow his adventures with the program: paranoia, treason, explosion, blood, etc ...


    Characters :

    On this part, I will not reveal the details of each character because I will risk to spoiler severe. And the spoil is bad: p

    Ryota Sakamoto: Young man of 22 years unemployed, Ryota is a hardcore gamer who spends his days playing online game rather than looking for work (strange it reminds me of the real world)

    noxy.png

    Kiyoshi Taira: he is a shark in business and he is 51 years old, he proposes to Ryota to sassocier to survive better on the island.

    kiyoshi-taira.jpg

    Himiko: Young student of 15 years, she is a little experienced player of Btooom! Note that she is "sexy" (as in an anime what). In short it is the miss OPPAI of the series.

    btooom-himiko-253306.jpg

    Kosuké Kira: A young psychopath of 14 years old who would not want to know in reality. Killer and rapist, we do not wonder why he is on the island as his past is revealed to us directly!

    kosuke.jpg

    Oda Nobutaka: We see little in the anime, but it is someone that Ryota knows and I think it will have a bigger place in season 2

    Nobutaka_Oda_2.png


    The opening of Btooom!

    A superb opening signed Nano, No pain No game! It wakes up in the morning and it gives the potato for the day! (Except after baking). On the video it is the version interpreted by the Youtubeuse Raon Lee

    Btooom Wallpaper!

    btooom1-wallpaper2.pngbtooom-wallpaper-4.jpgbtooom-wallpaper-5.jpg8285585a.pngbtooom-wallpaper-6.jpg


    My review

    Btooom! It is an anime that will show us human psychology when the law of the strongest reigns. Honestly, we do not get bored from beginning to end. The action is well conducted starting with the background and story before Ryota is sent to the island. Also the flashbacks of the other characters are not too long or too heavy. Their past stories and the "why they were sent to the island" betokens certain actions when they associate with each other.

    In the end we do not know who is sincere or not, and we can not predict the sequence of events. Some will have done bad deeds they will regret, others will not ... In short Btooom! It is a sadistic anime with people so frightened by their situations that have can see the dark side of the human and its selfishness to survive. I advise !


    I hope you like this post! You can follow me @redanime so you don't miss my future posts.

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  4. Michael's Long Box - BTOOOM! by Junya Inoue (2013, Yen Press)@modernzorker3275d

    BTOOOM.jpg


    Note: This review covers the entire BTOOM! series, not only this volume. There are no spoilers.

    My first impression upon reading BTOOM!'s description was, "Oh goodie! Another Hunger Games/Battle Royale rip-off. Just what the world needed." You can't really blame me though. The set-up's identical: a bunch of people, selected for reasons unknown to them, wake up on an island where they kill one another off until a winner emerges, while an audience watches the action on live-stream. Along the way, alliances are formed, friendships destroyed, and paranoia creeps in as the survivor count dwindles, the days turn into weeks, and supplies run low.

    Where have I seen such a scenario before, I wonder...?

    But BTOOM! manages to overcome this "me too" syndrome and emerge as its own stand-alone story set in the modern world, where ranked online gaming is basically a championship sport, and an entire generation of societal "drop-outs" (known as 'Neets', they're people who have decided to pour their energy into online interactions instead of in-person social activity) is changing Japan's cultural and social landscape in real-time.

    BTOOM! is actually two games in one. The first BTOOM!, and the one everybody knows about, is a massively-multiplayer online combat game set in a futuristic world where players adopt virtual avatars and deathmatch using devices called 'Bim'. Imagine Call of Duty or Halo, but where your main weapons are explosives with different types and usages. Some are contact explosives, some have homing properties, some are defensive in nature and create a shield around the user, some throw out swarms of smaller explosives, some can be placed like landmines, and so forth--there's an endless amount of strategy that goes into learning how to use Bim effectively, and the top-tier players of the game have honed this skill to a razor's edge.

    This is where our protagonist, Ryota Sakamoto, shines. As one of the ten highest-ranked BTOOM! players in the world, the 22-year old Ryota is a self-professed Neet who has turned his back on everyone (his job, classmates, step-dad, even his own mother) to maintain his skills and reputation as one of the best-of-the-best in this online world. He's even met Himiko, a highly-ranked and regarded female player who admires his skill, and the two have a puppy love cyber-relationship, even though they've never so much as talked in real life. As far as Ryota's concerned, this was the life he was always meant to live. The digital world of BTOOOM!'s a place where people all over the globe fear and revere him for his prowess; how the hell could real life possibly compete with that?

    Well...

    As far as someone else is concerned, this makes Ryota an ideal candidate for the other BTOOM!, the live-action, holy-shit-this-is-for-real game described in the first paragraph. Ryota's memories are hazy: last thing he remembered was playing BTOOM! on his Xbox 360, but now he's awake, dangling several feet up in the air from a parachute tangled in a tree, with a chip implanted in his hand and a container filled with real-life Bim. As the explosions start going off and he tries to get his bearings, Ryota comes to the inescapable conclusion that not only is he playing BTOOM! for real, but everybody else on the island is as well.

    BTOOM! is a solid, fast-paced action extravaganza with just enough to set it apart from other dystopian literature based around a similar premise. Like the best dystopian fiction, it uses an outlandish premise to reflect and offer commentary on current cultural, social, and political trends. "If you don't like what you see," mangaka Inoue tells us, "start working to change things before it's too late."

    The manga offers nicely-detailed back-story on all the participants, which unfold in flashback sequences explaining exactly who they are and what circumstances led to their inclusion in the game, and holds its story together very well over multiple volumes. Everything that happens has an explanation, though you may not get it immediately. This is obvious from the first book, where Ryota stumbles across a series of bodies, including one in the process of being consumed by insects, and another guy naked from the waist down, floating in a lagoon. We eventually meet these people and learn how and why they met their fates, but only several chapters later. When Inoue shows us explosions off in the distance, or a quick flash of a combatant to whom we've not yet been introduced, you can trust everything will eventually be explained. There isn't a throwaway scene in the whole series.

    BTOOOM! contains a minimal amount of fan service and light nudity in a few chapters, but it's not anything over-the-top or even unrealistic, despite what the cheesecake-y covers lead one to believe. Even the violence is more subdued than one might expect of a title where people blow one another to pieces with miniature bombs. It's not a story for kids, but it's far less brutal than, say, the manga adaptation of Battle Royale which, though awesome, relished its images of spilled intestines, gun-shot faces, and severed limbs a little too heartily in my opinion.

    Highly recommended for anyone who enjoys social commentary with their dystopian future manga, BTOOM! is a solid read from start to finish. Just when you think you know what's coming, Inoue hurls a wrench into the works and jerks you in a direction you couldn't have anticipated. What's more, when the end is in sight and our heroes prepare to win the day, he throws the curve ball of all curve balls, splitting the main characters up and dropping them into even worse scenarios as the designers of the real-life BTOOM! patch the 'bugs' in their system and ramp up the mayhem to satisfy an insatiably blood-thirsty audience, both in the manga and in real life.

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