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Ningen Fushin no Boukensha-tachi ga Sekai wo Sukuu you desu
Rated: PG-13 - Teens 13 or older
Status: Finished Airing
Source: Light novel
Score: 6.33
Rank: 8084
Popularity: 1369
Veteran adventurer Nick, mage Tiana, cleric Zem, and half-dragon Curran each show up alone at a tavern, only to find themselves seated at the same table. As the night goes on, they take turns divulging their grievances and the hobbies they have taken up as a means of coping. While their stories are utterly different, there is one common thread: betrayal. Each of the four, having been bitterly betrayed by someone they treasured, has developed a deep-seated distrust of humanity. But in addition to their similar worldviews, the four have one more commonality: a critical lack of funds. Realizing that things cannot continue as they are, they decide to form a party, rank up, and make as much money as possible to spend on their respective hobbies. What these disillusioned adventurers do not know, however, is that they will one day save the world from unfathomable peril. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
Curran
Main
Kikuchi, Sayaka
Nick
Main
Kobayashi, Yuusuke
Tiana
Main
Watabe, Sayumi
Zem
Main
Toki, Shunichi
Ada
Supporting
Kaida, Yuuko
Review
Marinate1016
Ningen Fushin started out as one of the most promising shows of the season. One of the latest in the “banished from the hero’s party” style of betrayal and redemption fantasy shows. Unfortunately what started out as a promising fantasy show with a fun cast devolved into a directionless mediocre story with no sense of purpose. I want to be clear that while Ningen Fushin definitely fell off I still liked the show for the most part. I’m just disappointed that it wasn’t as good as it could have been. The first few episodes give us a ragtag group of adventurers who have been cast outby the world and betrayed for various reasons, coming together to form a party and slowly but surely opening up to one another. Seeing the characters’ mini arcs, how they went from being on top of the world to rock bottom before ultimately meeting the others was really cool. I thought there was something natural about how all of them reacted to that trauma and moved on from it. Once those mini arcs stopped though, around episode 6 or so, we got a couple of what felt like filler episodes before getting into the next arc which frankly just felt weak. I do understand that this is of course a light novel series so the second volume was probably just weak compared to the first, but still, it’s a bit jarring with how good those first few eps were. It felt like the last two episodes are where the actual meat and potatoes of the story gets going and where the series starts to earn it’s “disillusioned adventurers save the world” title. I think it probably needed 24 episodes to really do well here. Where the series is really lacking is in the art. The animation is pretty bad to say the least for most of the series. It’s acceptable to have bad animation when the story is good enough to overlook it, but after those first few eps when the story quality went down, the animation started sticking out even more. I mean some of the scenes look like they were done by me in MS paint or something, it’s that bad. The character designs are ok when the characters aren’t moving, but any action in a scene and it quickly starts to unravel. Ningen Fushin is an enjoyable but not mandatory Winter 2023 watch by any stretch. It’s got an interesting premise, but fails to really make the most of it. Instead becoming a rather generic and run of the mill fantasy series that, while not bad, isn’t anything special. Ningen Fushin gets 7 out of 10.
TheAsterNaut
This show is the perfect example of an interesting premise with poor execution. A group of outcasts form a party and begin adventuring and learning to trust again. However, the show takes multiple weird turns like modern/advanced tech in ancient locations, multiple episodes on side characters no one cares about, and generally no adventuring outside of the town that they live in apart from a few dungeons. There's also the issue that some of the animation is rather unpolished in some places, whether it is awful perspective or missing frames of animation that makes movement stop-motion like. Finally, the show spends too much time on charactersindividually listening to their thoughts, watching them go about their hobbies, or listening to a long sobby backstory. There's not much meat on the metaphorical bone so I would recommend not watching this; 3/10 just listen to the catchy ending song and enjoy that.