It pairs Daisuke Kambe (Yusuke Onuki), who is both the head of a wealthy and influential family and a police officer, with Haru Kato (Mamoru Miyano), a detective who’s average compared to Kambe. This isn’t your average buddy cop series. It’s a show that came and went, only popping up on social media once in a blue moon. “The Millionaire Detective – Balance: UNLIMITED” was one of my comfort shows during the pandemic. There’s also an anime film that predates the show, called “Death Billiards,” but you don’t have to watch it to understand “Death Parade.” If you want to experience an existential crisis (if you aren’t already), this show - available on Hulu and Crunchyroll - will do just that.ĭaisuke Kambe (Yusuke Onuki) (Image: Crunchyroll) It’s about change, which defines a human being. The games, however, aren’t about the outcome - they’re about the process of remembering, grieving, and accepting the life they lived and whether they felt fulfilled. Two people, with no memories of their past lives, must compete if they want to be reborn. When someone dies, they enter a mysterious bar called Quindecim, where a bartender named Decim (Tomoaki Maeno) is the host of various Death Games. That probably doesn’t sound any better, but if you’re the type who wants to sit and stare at your reflection on the screen after a show is done, “Death Parade” may be your cup of tea. If anyone asks me for anime recommendations, I always bring up “Death Parade.” It sounds bleak - and it can be - but it’s also the type of show that tries to humanize the afterlife while challenging moral ambiguity and existence. The Black-Haired Woman (Asami Seto) and Decim (Tomoaki Maeno). It’s not for the faint of heart, so be prepared! With 11 episodes on Crunchyroll, “Terror in Resonance” is a quick watch but has heavy themes and undertones. Lisa becomes our POV into these boys’ true selves and acts as a foil to the normal life they would have had. The boys are trying to send a message that they’re not the ones people should be afraid of. What most people don’t realize is that Nine and Twelve don’t actually hurt anyone during the terrorist attacks - they make sure people have evacuated the buildings before they trigger the bombs. So how do two teenagers manage to carry out these terrorist attacks? Nine and Twelve come from an institution where orphaned children are part of an experiment that develops their intelligence and turns them into human weapons. Caught in the middle of the boys’ nefarious scheme is Lisa (Atsumi Tanezaki), a teenage girl who’s a victim of high school bullying. They do it while wearing masks so their identities aren’t compromised, and their group is called - very fittingly - Sphinx. Psychological thriller “Terror in Resonance” is about two teenage boys, named Nine (Kaito Ishikawa) and Twelve (Soma Saito), who upload videos to the internet that threaten Tokyo’s destruction unless someone solves their cryptic riddles. Twelve (Soma Saito) and Nine (Kaito Ishikawa).
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