Blog Archives

Otaku in Review Podcast – Shinji’s Erection

This week’s guest is Scott Frye, who you may know from Twitter and/or his blog Café Afternoon. On this episode we discuss the wonders of fanservice, both in the broad sense and the sexual sense. We analyze various examples of fanservice and discuss the ongoing debate of what exactly can be classified as fanservice. And at what point does a series “cross the line”? Listen to our thoughts and more on this episode.

Otaku in Review – Episode 43 – Shinji’s Erection | Subscribe in iTunes

Visual Novel Review: Kira Kira

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to start your own band? The good times, the fame, and the hardships you’d go through with your friends? Would it strengthen your friendships or pull them apart? And in the end, would it all be worth it? In Kira Kira, you can get a taste of what it’s like. With an array of routes to choose from each involving different characters and some deep emotional moments, this visual novel is a lot more than what it appears to be. You may even be tempted to label it as trash simply because of its romantic elements – but that would be a shame, because that would be disregarding the story as a whole, and a huge disrespect to its creators.

Kira Kira follows the story of Shikanosuke Maejima, a student attending Oubi Academy in Tokyo. Shikanosuke is a mediocre student with no real aspirations in life – he just wants to get through high school. Three of his female friends, Kirari, Chie, and Sarina, are members of the Second Literature Club. Due to lack of interest, the club is set to be dissolved at the end of the school year. In an effort to save the club, the three girls and Shikanosuke decide to put on a live rock performance at the school’s cultural festival. Through the help of Murakami, a close friend, the group is introduced to punk music and they decide that is the sound that they want to go for. The band members set out to learn their instruments while simultaneously learning the history of punk music and the true meaning of “punk.”

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