I dislike either way.
The Nobunaga-kun who was performing seems a little pitiful.
>>2During the Gundam popularity vote, I was really into it and enjoyed playing Iokue-myu, so I guess I like it quite a bit.
I have a strong feeling of being forced to accommodate the circumstances of the development.
If this character design had been extremely strong in MS battles, it might have been interesting.
It’s one thing to survive and grow, but it’s difficult to react when dying normally.
I don’t think it was necessary to kill in the scenario.
In terms of emotions, it often ended up being said that I killed well.
On the contrary, I wanted them to survive and grow.
By killing this guy in the final episode now, it wouldn’t have resolved any hate at all.
Rather, it pissed me off.
Suddenly stepping forward to die also shows a hint of the intention to soothe the viewers’ frustrations.
It’s so excessive that it’s actually easier to turn it into a joke.
He’s a hopeless guy, but I thought he was growing and changing the Galaho… and then he died.
If you’ve gone that far to keep him alive, don’t kill him.
Personally, he’s not a bad guy, so it’s hard to respond.
In the end, there were no young people left who could change the gallery.
Gari Gari is retired, and Julietta doesn’t seem capable of handling politics.
>>14So the remaining old man made some adjustments.
>>17If you can do it, you should have done it from the start, that’s what they say…
It seems McGillis became a good excuse.
>>19Well, I suppose that’s thanks to the achievement of suppressing the McGillis rebellion and the fact that the influential families are on the decline, which has shifted the power balance.
>>19In reality, at the beginning of the second season, the old man’s perception was that it was a race between whether the old man would carry out the reform or if Maki would do it.
Every time I see a comment saying they felt relieved that this guy died, it makes me think that it just shows how we’re still being manipulated by a bad script to the very end… and I’m not satisfied with that.
I dislike the meat old man and Gaelio, who were protected way more than this guy.
I said it’s because you’re straightforward that you’re liked, so why are you acting so petty? Are you an idiot?
I don’t particularly like or dislike it, but it would have been a nicer story if the meat uncle had died.
>>20It was a development that thoroughly went against what you would expect in a “Well, isn’t it supposed to be like this…?” kind of situation.
Homosexuals take off the Dainsleif.
>>20The meat uncle didn’t bring it out and move it to wrap up the story, did he?
>>45I think it would have been better to have this guy do the folding role…
The meat uncle isn’t very clean…
>>53It’s not just about accepting both good and bad.
It’s inevitable that characters who commit more wicked deeds simply because they can only see beautiful things will survive.
>>53The ability to fold…
I can’t imagine a scenario where this guy can hold his own against those crooked old men.
>>72It will just end up being a mere puppet.
>>72So I thought it would lead to a development where the subordinate reflects and grows after becoming a casualty.
Died without anything particularly changing…
>>77During the Namase assault, there were depictions of him running away, but when it came to the homo incident, he was trying to protect the meat old man, showing some growth.
I did, but then the reset button was pressed in the final episode.
>>53I think it would have been better if it were Gaelio.
It’s fine to carry on his will to change the world in a different way than McGillis, especially since he was dissatisfied with the current state of Gallarhorn.
What are you doing retiring so soon?
Even if I were to die, the timing and way of death were the worst.
If I’m told that’s how it is because I’ve thought about it this way, I find that even less believable.
Even if I die, it will just end up being “so what.”
I thought for a moment to reflect, but in the end, it was like that final episode, and even though there wasn’t a direct connection withaki Hiroshi, I suddenly got angry and didn’t know what I wanted.
Ah
Ho
Nevertheless, this guy has no self-awareness at all and is nothing more than a remote-controlled device to move the story forward…
>>26Did that last unnecessary charge, where I died, have its own ego or something!?
This guy was relatively liked, and although he was foolish, he wasn’t evil. I thought he would survive and change the future since he was sacrificed only to advance the story, so it was kind of sad how roughly he was handled.
It was a necessary sacrifice to weaken the power of Gjallarhorn by crushing the next generation.
I wished that even the monkey would lose an arm or two.
I hate everything about the time when I killed this guy! It’s not you!
Even if this guy dies, it would only serve as a way for Akihiro to relieve his frustrations.
Considering the sacrifices that have been made because of this guy so far, it would be more comforting if he lived and improved the environment on Mars through politics…
Those who sacrificed themselves for this guy can’t be at peace.
It’s the kind of guy who would die just when it would be okay for him to become the next leader of the Gallaho…
I think it’s better to graduate from that immature thinking of feeling like the center of the world or going against something simply because you don’t like it.
>>32????????
He died when it no longer mattered to the viewers.
I wonder if they were hesitant to decide whether to let it grow or not until the very last moment…
The expression that existence itself is like a bad actor really sticks in my mind.
It’s still better to die in a traffic accident than to be killed by a named character.
I thought, “Be killed when you’re most hated and make it entertaining.”
>>38It can’t be helped; if the script doesn’t make this guy act incompetently, we can’t move the story forward.
I actually disliked monkeys more than this guy.
The issue with Turbines is indeed a baseless accusation, but the fact that Teiwaz is really making Dynastraves means that not everything is completely wrong.
>>40It is true that the false accusation of having found the Dynasleif was made.
The fact that we transported Frauros itself is a gray area, so I think we could have pushed through if we wanted to.
As a result of acting as a hate figure, it resulted in significantly damaging the Tekkadan.
What bothers me personally is that he’s not a bad guy, so even if he dies, I won’t feel relief.
>>46I don’t want a rich kid who causes people to die…
There were a lot of anonymous commenters completely losing their temper during the live broadcast at that time, and it was really shocking.
If I had to choose, it would have been better to survive and be the decorative leader of Kujan while being exasperated by Julietta.
I like that there are hints that I was liked by the people in the house.
There were no scenes where the characters were genuinely intense when letting go in front of Hashmal, or where anyone other than Julietta was bad-mouthing the thread images.
This guy brought the thinning group to a crisis as an enemy, so that’s fine.
It’s an enemy.
McGillis is much more malicious and terrible.
It would have been better if they had just gone all out as a ruthless character from the beginning.
It’s disappointing because while pretending to be a proper faction, I’ve been treated as a hassle by the enemy side all along.
>>44Unfortunately, if McGillis is not present, there is a high possibility that the Tekkadan will collapse even faster.
>>55Honestly, wouldn’t it be better to just collapse quickly and then rebuild with the remaining time?
I think it’s quite consistent that they are incompetent and thoughtless, but as a person, they are relatively honest.
It’s just that being incompetent and thoughtless is fatal.
>>56From the perspective of the Rastor faction, they have only been taking positive actions.
Isn’t it possible to say they are not incompetent?
>>79Using Dainsleif and site visits for MA excavation without considering the location is delicate.
If I had done a little better, it wouldn’t have become this problem or could have served as material to criticize McGillis.
>>79What is being demanded of this guy is political power, and isn’t it the subordinates’ job to go to the front lines and stir things up?
The last death throes were a bit interesting.
I think it’s a rare character.
It was a character that made me understand why it was rare.
If I’m going to die, I should die fighting with determination.
Even if it was acting as a hate tank, letting it live there was the biggest mistake.
It was honestly a fresh experience to see hate penetrating the character and directing the production.
Seven Star Medal!
Somewhere along the way, it seems like there are more and more idiots coming from my side who are dumber than this guy, so relatively, he starts to look better.
It was a way of dying that seemed like, since we built up the hate, killing here would make the viewers happy, right?
Syohiro also left satisfied for some reason with a form of escapism that he didn’t really understand, and it was truly an incomprehensible death scene.
>>64It’s youーーーー!
>>68I think that was just because I couldn’t do anything else, so I made sure to give them something as a souvenir for the afterlife.
I don’t really know if it was necessary to make it last.
Personally, the right answer for this kind of character is Lieutenant Koi Noboru…
The way to die is interesting, but I’m not really happy about it.
The official has been provoking viewers by calling it “Iok-sama’s Sermon Room” and “Iok-sama’s Defense Room,” which is really insulting to the audience.
The hate that should have been directed at Iok in the story ended up feeling vague, resulting in a sense that it was dealt with haphazardly at the end.
In the final stages, there was nothing but hate or confusion…
It’s quite rare to get this confused about character handling.
It’s funny that, despite having the strong trust of their subordinates, nobody stepped in to cover for them in the final episode.
>>78I exhausted my subordinate too much in the Hashmal battle…
“If it’s a character like ‘grown-up Iok,’ that’s one thing, but since Iok is still a fool, I wonder how many years it will take for him to properly take on a responsible role.”
>>80Why are you setting up foreshadowing that seems to lead to strange growth halfway through?
What was that calligraphy…?
>>86It might grow… Before advancing to the stage where growth is still needed, it charged headfirst into the front lines.
As expected, the treatment in the final stages and at the end was just sad… it couldn’t help but be that way.
I hate feeling pity for someone because they are being forced too much into the role of a hate tank.
Do it at the stage where it feels refreshing.
I’m confused because I included a depiction of growth, yet there’s hardly any connection with Akihiro, who died.
>>84If you’re going to lose your temper, you might as well do it with a prayer…
Do you think saying loyalty solves everything?
But when it comes to doing roles like this, Nobunaga Shimazaki is really good at playing empty-headed rich kids, and that’s just unfair.
I was playing a perfect character in Code Geass as well.
>>90I wonder why that person has such a high aptitude for creepy enemies and stupid people…
Since there is no position on the Earth side to be concerned about the future of the space mice, who had no choice but to become Yakuza after everything was over.
I feel like it would have been good if the character who fought so hard learned the truth and engaged in atonement activities.
It has to end in an absolutely yakuza-like way, that’s what Orga’s shooting is about…
It’s an entertainment work, so is there really a need to be particular about that…?
Regardless of Io’s situation, it might have been possible for Kudelia to survive without being the meat uncle if she had grown politically in the second season.
In the second season, it feels abrupt for the politician to quit being a politician and then act as one in the epilogue.
I think that the mistake in choosing the place of death was a result of realizing that there were not enough named individuals on the side of the attackers when the Tekkadan was collapsing, which led to an extension of life.
Not understanding at all what will happen if I die is overwhelming.
No matter what foolishness I did, I never understood until the very end why my subordinates protected me with their lives.
>>99It seemed like there were things they somewhat understood when being crushed, but their speed of growth was too slow to reflect that in their actions.
You should raise the meat old man further back!
I understand that it was used conveniently, but I didn’t really understand the character.
The way they dealt with hashes and other things seems careless and it’s sad to see so many unfortunate ones.
I think the character has become one that doesn’t have育成能力 (育成能力 refers to growth or training ability) because of the meat uncle.
>>103It seems like he’s giving a sermon to Iok in the story, though…
>>103It seems that the young McGillis is misjudged, and he doesn’t seem to have the talent to nurture the inexperienced.
It seems like the intention is to bet on the already grown Kudelia since it’s no longer possible to raise the next generation.
In the final episode, please don’t direct hate towards Lystar, Julia, or Gaelio who are properly dealt with.
It feels very much like a device.
What was Akihiro’s life like, I wonder…
>>106Derma and others have survived, so it was meaningful.
That said, I wonder about this end.
The way I was overwhelmed by the hash was quite something.
>>107The feeling of repeating Eugene’s failure of becoming a traitor to the Iron Flower Gang and being unable to join his comrades again.
To be blunt, I wish they had explored the Cursed Womb Wars more deeply rather than focusing on the Yakuza society.
If Iok-sama dies, there will only be one non-mob enemy left, the wild man.
That character seemed to have a weak connection, and in the end, it turned out to be this one?
Julietta’s character was too thin to be positioned as a rival character.
>>114Stop carefully piling up weaknesses on the character who’s thin and irrelevant, just to make them weaker than the allies.
Since this guy is about the only combatant who can move properly, at least he should have some strength.
In the sense of stage equipment, too.
There aren’t many characters that make me think, “I wish they hadn’t existed” up to this point.
If there aren’t many attractive enemy characters left, I think it would have been fine to just release the MA casually.
Maybe they didn’t like it because it puts a strain on the combat scenes…
But I don’t want to see the random battles of Dainsleif.
If you’re going to shoot that, shoot it at the MA.
The two who were in a position to bring the story to a close ended up getting excited just the two of them and finishing it just the two of them.
There aren’t any such descriptions in the work, but it seems like this person would celebrate any happy event that happens to their subordinates.
Even though there are yakuza elements, I feel that it’s somewhat half-hearted as a yakuza story because the main conflict is with the Gallarhorn organization and there aren’t many clashes with other groups or internal strife.
>>121The Tekkadan lacks the abilities of a Yakuza…
Even if you dislike someone, if they are in a higher position, it’s not well done to just bow your head and endure it out of courtesy.
The meat uncle doesn’t really explain the reasons even when he tries to stop Juliet.
So Julieta has gone out of control several times as well.
>>122My best friend, the bearded uncle, and the meat uncle still want to assess McGillis, but they take unilateral action and try to kill him.
If you’re not kind to your subordinates, I can’t understand how someone so incompetent can be so well-liked…
It was terrible that there was a depiction of some kind of reformation, but nothing changed at all.
Baby!
It’s a convenient hate tank, but I’m just too bad at managing it as a hate contributor…
The timing and the person for Akihiro to snap or hand over the reins were there even before the thread image.
It’s like the premise of entertainment, which involves surprises and counter to what is normally done, has completely slipped away.
It’s as if they’re looking too much at the viewers’ reactions in a bad way.
I’m getting tired of seeing so many people age their Iron-Blooded characters just to hit Zeke Ax.
>>131Please do that discussion with someone in the Zikuaxus thread.
>>131Keep doing your best and keep hitting that iron blood.
>>131It’s me who suddenly brings up topics like that.
The bad parts of the second season.
If this person were to behave quietly, I feel like that alone could avoid a disastrous ending.
MA does not go on a rampage, and the turbines are not attacked.
If Teiwaz doesn’t have internal conflicts, the Tekkadan won’t need to break their cups, and there will be no need for McGillis to bet everything.
>>134Because they are a convenient character, I will have them work until the final episode.
>>134The actions of the Turbines and the Tekkadan, which favor them, are likely to irritate the executives like Jasray, so it’s probably impossible.
The Tekkadan accepting the proposal from the king of Mars and Naese becoming the young leader has nothing to do with Iok.
I feel like everyone has a grasp of this much, so I’ll just leave it be, assuming they understand.
As a result, all of my subordinates have messed up.
Akihiro is you, huh?! Suddenly getting angry and killing the thread’s image, then dying satisfied — the whole thing is incomprehensible and amazing.
I wonder if a person who has learned from a painful experience can truly grow, only to end up being a person who gives up after three days…
The character of that person is problematic for the next top echelon of the police organization.
I have memories of the first season being somewhat watchable, but the second season was just a mess and really tough to get through.
Jaslay’s brother said that the flagship looks stylishly uncool after going around once.
>>143The flagship of Jarsley has reinforced armor, resulting in the absurd situation where it can’t properly retract its bridge, which is counterproductive and foolish.
Even if I’m told it’s a setup, if the propellant is destroyed in the story and then all that’s left is to be hit, then closing the bridge wouldn’t have any meaning… I can’t help but feel that way.
It’s scary that there are subordinates who would die for this guy.
I really didn’t understand why I was being admired.
>>144Moreover, they’re all elite.
>>144It was explained in the play as “the light of a parent’s influence.”
What I’m serving is not this guy, but his deceased father.
>>149It has been said that Io-ku himself possesses a charisma that meat uncle does not have.
>>154I wonder if I had a similar appearance or voice to my parents.
I understand the feeling of hoping to become a parent figure, but if there’s an educator in the house, they should do their job.
Since both will end up dead anyway, I feel like it would have been better if they seriously fought and ended in a double knockout with both dying.
After the period of reflection, it’s amusing to see them behaving modestly when we already know the outcome.
If a subordinate scolds you and you cry, even if you’re a jokester, I think that’s a growth flag…
Well, it was only thanks to Lord Iok that we were able to crush the Turbines so forcefully, and without him, we might have been able to settle down and have a bit more of a civil war within Teiwaz.
Even Lystall seems to be surrounded by Iok’s gratitude towards the previous generation…
Who was the predecessor?
If we think of it as a story, Lord Iok should have entrusted his son to his father rather than to himself.
The responsibility of the subordinates belonging to the Iok family, who were completely untrained, is quite heavy.
Iok-sama! Don’t think I’m satisfied just because I protected you and died!
Well, it’s also bad that the subordinates are spoiling Lord Iok.
If those guys and Lord Lustar both say it’s a no, they’ll definitely listen.
When I see Machu, it reminds me of this guy.
It’s just a difference between whether the impact of a blunder is directed inward or outward.
In a way, a character that’s like Nobunaga’s turning point.
Like Liu Shan who has motivation?
The same goes for Iron-Blooded Orphans, and now with Zeke Axis that’s currently airing, it’s failing in the script too. What’s going on, seriously…
About the things that weren’t needed in Iron-Blooded Orphans Season 2, part 2.
I’m an esper, but there’s this guy who keeps saying “Ziek Ax” forcefully.
Even if this guy was a victim of the script, there is absolutely no reason to like him.
I think being honest is somewhat… a virtue.
Well, bullying might be fun in reality, huh?
It can’t be seen as the character’s outcome; it seems like a victim of the script, which indicates that both the script and direction were flawed.
The thread image can be said to represent the limitations of the seven-house system.
It’s come to the point where we have to rely on something like this, so as an organization, it’s finished! The meat uncle has done well.
I wanted to think that bullying was fun too.
I didn’t dislike it because it was sad that they survived until the final episode and got killed.
It feels more like the overall direction of the director was completely missing rather than the script itself.
I think it’s rare to find someone who embodies negative opportunism to this extent.
Akihiro hasn’t done anything wrong, but it feels really unsatisfying for the viewers if just this guy dies, which creates an emotional mismatch.
After all, if we just make the monkey’s hands and feet mechanical by amputating them…
Akihiro has quite a few dramas prepared, but his actions and words aren’t quite right, so he can’t respond very well.
The relationship with Laughter was one-sided as well.
Even if you die after reaching a stage where you feel relieved from dying…
If it turned out that I was just exceptionally strong in the MS battle, I might have laughed and forgiven it!
I quite like it.
At a personal level, they probably aren’t that bad of a person.