That’s already more detail than is likely necessary - know that Afro sets out to cut a lot of people with sharp things, sometimes in adaptation of scenes from Okazaki’s manga. The animation quality remains fairly high, with a uniquely fluid sense of style (one prolonged fight scene is presented in a glossy, almost airbrushed-looking manner, for no apparent reason beyond maybe looking neat, which it does) and a gratifying devotion to detailed, tactile action with some underlying logic - stuff that’s missing from a lot of ‘action’ anime today, which tend toward stiffness and airless aesthetic conservatism. Anime Is Totally Unexpected - comiXology
(new jog reviews!)
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