First Look: Fastest Finger First
There are some very smart students entering an inter-school quiz competition and I already feel stupid.
There are some very smart students entering an inter-school quiz competition and I already feel stupid.
After his high school accommodation burns down, Inaba Yuushi is left scrambling for a new apartment to avoid commuting to school from home. Fortunately he manages to find a place at a good price, but he’ll have to get used to some regular visitors.
In a world where everyone is assigned a predetermined marriage partner at the age of 16, one bland protagonist plans to defy the system and live with the girl of his dreams.
It’s another Holy Grail War, but now it’s 7-on-7 team-based multiplayer!
The team somehow deduces Altair’s bizarre abilities and begins to devise a plan to defeat her.
Altair crashes the party with heretofore unseen abilities, leading to Selesia taking a mortal wound. As she inexplicably recovers, the show can’t decide on the themes it wants to express.
Did you know that Magane was supposed to be a villain? The show doesn’t think you get it yet, so she manipulates Aliceteria to hunt down our heroes.
Sota refuses to spill the beans about the Military Uniform Princess – including her true name, Altair – to anyone but Mamika, who decides to confront her directly.
We’re somewhere vaguely halfway into the Spring season again, so here we are again to tell you which opening sequences and ending themes we didn’t skip after the first episode this time around! This time around, hamburgers, holiday pictures and HEAVY METAL.
Everyone searches for clues on the Military Uniform Princess’s true identity. Meanwhile, Magane begins her inevitable murder spree, starting with her Creator.
A dangerous new Creation appears, and each side of the conflict wants her on theirs.
Our heroes are dragged before a government subcommittee to explain what the dickens has been going on the past four episodes.
Everyone sits around for a whole episode and speculates on the rules governing the situation. For no particular reason, they turn out to be completely correct.
Years before the tale of Astro Boy, Doctors Tenma and Ochanomizu were simple robotics students working on their newest project: A106, a robot with self-awareness.
The crank is turned on the office gacha machine, and out plops a small ball. Opening it up, we see two small slips of paper, each with a single printed word. The first of these slips says ‘music’. The second says ‘pretentious’. Challenge accepted, shouts Brain’s Base.
Hinako, a girl much better at talking to animals than to humans, moves to the big city, where she meets a wide array of (supposedly) quirky characters.
Ten years after the world’s destruction at the hands of Bahamut was narrowly averted, the humans seem to be getting a bit big for their britches, hunting down gods and demons alike.
A kid who is sexually attracted to clocks becomes very excited when a robot falls out of the sky and starts sucking on his fingers.
A bookish misanthrope and an anxious athlete go to school together and, um… awkwardly fumble around each other, I guess?
A boy can’t deal with the idea of feminine authority figures, and vows to defeat them.