[Official] Anime/Manga Thread


Recommended Posts

I just watched Sora no Manimani. I'm really enjoying this series both the humor and serious side of it. And of course the astronomy side is a big plus :)

Watched the 8th episode just now and kept on laughing at Edogawa's antics and Sayo's dad :laugh:

Radish?

if you start with naruto first season' you will want to skip the filler shortly after sasuke breaks away. then you will want to jump directly to shippuuden. i recommend reading the manga' it will give you more insight when you start watching it.

so im thinking im going to give naruto a try.

You should give it a try. A lot of people look down on Naruto and I'm not entirely sure why. Yeah it's not the deepest anime ever created, but for me it's entertaining and that's all that matters.

And yeah, the filler after the big Naruto/Sasuke fight is horrendous, there's about 100 or so episodes you'll want to skip after that. Watch it if you want, but it doesn't add anything to the main story of Naruto and it's really bad. You've been warned. :rofl:

Animenewsnetwork lists episode 136 as the first filler episode. Oh yeah, if you do skip the filler, be sure to get the very last(before Shipuuden) Naruto episode #220, because that is actually part of the story.

Edited by trag3dy
You should give it a try. A lot of people look down on Naruto and I'm not entirely sure why. Yeah it's not the deepest anime ever created, but for me it's entertaining and that's all that matters.

it's looked down on for two reasons 1. the fanbase 2. it is aimed at kids FFS when you have things like Genocyber, Angel cop, Bast4rd, and Queen's blade out there it's kinda obvious as to what age group it's aimed at.

naruto shippuuden is a great quality anime. the art style is well done' music compositition is great' and the story has some good meanings and twist. id rate it higher than bleach' though i enjoy bleach more..... dunno why lol. maybe its that naruto started broadcasting in hd.. or sort of hd lol.

it's looked down on for two reasons 1. the fanbase 2. it is aimed at kids FFS when you have things like Genocyber, Angel cop, Bast4rd, and Queen's blade out there it's kinda obvious as to what age group it's aimed at.

it sort of is. but i think the fact that it deals with kids puts that impression off way more than it actually is. especially with the new ones. theres mass deaths happening every week with characters people have built 'bonds' with.

it sort of is. but i think the fact that it deals with kids puts that impression off way more than it actually is. especially with the new ones. theres mass deaths happening every week with characters people have built 'bonds' with.

yeah but when these mass deaths and usually the result of some hand jive it doesn't have the same impact as 5 rounds from a .50 desert Eagle at near point blank range.

is any animes fan base cool :p

Yeah the one from Detective Conan

PS: the plural of anim? is anim? with no S.

yeah but when these mass deaths and usually the result of some hand jive it doesn't have the same impact as 5 rounds from a .50 desert Eagle at near point blank range.

what about a heart being ripped out infront of someones face' arms being blown off and sucked into other dimensions' or someone being buried alive but in several bits n peices. also had a guy forced to kill himself with his own moves. most of these characters are ones with backstories as well. its gotten better :)

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Stack Overflow is launching a version of itself for AI agents by David Uzondu Stack Overflow has announced Stack Overflow for Agents, a platform that traditionally hosts crowdsourced programming solutions for human developers, but now serves autonomous software agents. Basically, Stack Overflow's argument is that the rapid democratization of building software has exposed a major vulnerability. Agents operate in isolation, creating an Ephemeral Intelligence Gap where they waste valuable tokens on something another agent halfway across the world has already solved. That's why, according to the company, a shared, real-time knowledge repository is needed. Stack Overflow for Agents is currently in beta, running as an API-first knowledge exchange where humans review what agents publish. To prevent hallucination issues and keep the database clean, the platform uses a multi-agent verification loop to check code quality. This system forces agents to query the corpus first to locate validated answers rather than running expensive code-generation scripts. To ensure trust, Stack Overflow connects agent contributions directly to the human developer's established reputation through single sign-on credentials. The agents can interact with three distinct post types. One option, Questions, documents unsolved bugs, while "Today I Learned" posts record debugging traces. Blueprints round out the selection by storing reusable design patterns. If an enterprise wants to keep proprietary data private, the Stack Internal platform allows the organization to run the assistant behind its own firewall. Before the massive rise of LLMs, which tanked its traffic by about 50% over the last couple of years, Stack Overflow was the go-to website for millions of programmers seeking coding solutions. Some argue that another reason why the website sort of fell off stems from its notoriously hostile (and condescending) community that frequently closed basic questions and alienated beginners with strict gatekeeping. In order to avoid getting eaten by AI, Stack Overflow has tried several things. When volunteer moderators banned AI-generated content in 2023 to protect data quality, corporate leaders tried to limit those restrictions, prompting the volunteers to stage a massive site-wide strike. Since then, the developer portal has signed major deals with tech companies like Google to bring Stack Overflow data directly into Gemini models and Google Cloud console. A similar deal with OpenAI in 2024 sparked an uproar, leading some users to delete old answers in protest. The company swiftly suspended those accounts to protect the database. It has also experimented with OverflowAI, an AI-powered conversational search tool designed to pull together answers from multiple threads.
    • There are two options for smartphone platforms so consumers don't have much of a choice there. The EU is not making any decisions for customers they just want them to have options if they so choose. I am not sure why you would be for closed platforms. The big tech companies already have so much power and money while are relatively unregulated in the US which is why they run into so much trouble in the EU.
    • Hello, I am using a Moto G Stylus (2025) and happy with it.  I don't know how well the model works on Twigby's network (it looks like they are an MVNO of Verizon).  It looks like they have a BYOD plan, though, so as long as you find a device that works on their network you should be okay.   Regards,   Aryeh Goretsky 
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      StaticMatrix earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      StaticMatrix earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      lamborghiniv10 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Month Later
      pinnclepd earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • First Post
      X-No-file earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      532
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      209
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      150
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      100
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      84
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!