I'm not the biggest reader of manga. I like reading manga, but usually if there's an anime, I prefer watching the anime. (Which is how I sorta felt with Inuyasha.)
So would you say that the anime accomplished the main storyline for Au Haru Ride? It honestly did a lot to tell a succinct story of grief, redemption, finding one's self, and friendship and more. It was super relatable for me. Futaba was/is me all during college pretty much, and during school.
I feel with the manga industry, they like to churn out more and more vs telling a succinct story. Popularity/getting the readers to turn more pages vs quality of shorter content. Like it was basically made to keep making more chapters.
All Comments (1) Comments
I'm not the biggest reader of manga. I like reading manga, but usually if there's an anime, I prefer watching the anime. (Which is how I sorta felt with Inuyasha.)
So would you say that the anime accomplished the main storyline for Au Haru Ride? It honestly did a lot to tell a succinct story of grief, redemption, finding one's self, and friendship and more. It was super relatable for me. Futaba was/is me all during college pretty much, and during school.
I feel with the manga industry, they like to churn out more and more vs telling a succinct story. Popularity/getting the readers to turn more pages vs quality of shorter content. Like it was basically made to keep making more chapters.