They wouldn’t choose such shows at random. I really should pay more attention to the shows that MVM choose to give the Collector’s Edition treatment. The over-exposed look, coupled with neon bright, primary colours makes my eyes hurt, and I felt that I ought to watch this show with my shades on. The first few episodes didn’t help much, as I really don’t get along with this show’s visual aesthetic. Quite recently MVM brought us Outbreak Company and they’ve also been working through Familiar of Zero, both of which also saw otaku sent forth into their ideal fantasy realms, so I felt quite sated with the genre when No Game, No Life turned up for review. After all, anime about gamers and otaku that get sucked into a fantasy world are two a penny, especially those that get trapped in some kind of virtual hell (Log Horizon, Sword Art Online etc). The first thing they have to do is become King, which in this country is decided by gambling, and the current heir to the throne, Stephanie Dola is a terrible gambler.Ĭonclusion I wasn’t expecting much from No Game, No Life. They’ll have their work cut out trying to win this game. The Elkia Kingdom is a small patch of land, and Imanity are lowest ranked of the races of Disboard. It’s Tet who’s pulled brother and sister Sora and Shiro into this world, and he sets them down in the Elkia Kingdom, the redoubt of the humans, called Imanity in Disboard. The god Tet tired of the bickering, and changed the rules so that conflict could only be resolved through games, and all were bound by 10 Pledges to keep the games fair. They get transported to the world of Disboard, a fantasy world where 16 races once warred for supremacy. A mysterious gamer challenges them to a game of chess, and when they win, offers them another world, a better world more suited to their talents a world where everything revolves around games.
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