Showing posts with label my hero academia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my hero academia. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2026

MORE My Hero Academia... For One Last Time

My Hero Academia final season More is coming to Crunchyroll tomorrow (May 2).

Thursday, January 1, 2026

BEST FILMS & TV OF 2025


The best, new, movies I saw last year were (in no particular order):
I have to be honest, because of my medical issues last year, I haven't felt like watching/reviewing many new films - instead building up a healthy backlog of unopened Blu-rays to (hopefully) throw myself into in 2026.

On the other hand, I did watch an awful lot of TV shows, much of it being new.

My favourites for the year in this category (again, in no particular order) were:


We also said goodbye to some great, long-running shows in 2025, including:
  • Stranger Things - no notes.
  • Cobra Kai - now that’s how you do a franchise! Fantastic and satisfying wrap-up for the series.
  • Evil - we finally got closure on the greatest pulp horror show of the 21st Century. This one really breaks my heart because it was such an inventive genre programme, running through more outrĂ© ideas per episode than most shows conjure up in a season. And Katja Herbers.
  • The Handmaid’s Tale
  • Squid Games 
  • The Sandman 
  • My Hero Academia
I'm easily pleased!

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

My Hero Academia Prequel Continues in January


I've just started the final season of My Hero Academia (on Crunchyroll, of course) so once I've finished that - and recovered from the trauma of MHA ending - I will then be able to play catch-up with the first season of My Hero Academia: Vigilantes. Then onto the new, second season as trailed above.

Friday, December 5, 2025

I'm On A Crunchyroll


As well as helping me get my Christmas shopping finished nice and early, this year's Black Friday also saw Amazon  offering some cut-price Prime Video subscription deals for the many, many channels available through its central hub.

So, I got myself a sub to Crunchyroll, which I'd been circling for months.

But what is Crunchyroll, you may ask?

Google summarises it as follows:
Crunchyroll is a streaming service for anime and other Japanese entertainment, owned by Sony Group Corporation. It offers a vast library of anime series, films, and manga, with content available to stream both with original Japanese audio and subtitles or with English dubs.
I had two main reasons for this subscription: (a) I was fed up waiting for more episodes of My Hero Academia to be released on blu-ray and wanted to see the final season and the spin-off series, Vigilantes; and (b) I wanted to see what other fantasy anime were available that gave off similar vibes to my new favourite shows: Delicious in Dungeon and Frieren: Beyond Journey's End.

Now, I knew there were a LOT of animes out there, but I don't think I was fully ready for the full Crunchyroll library (and this is nowhere close to all the animes, as there are several other streamers offering similar content, such as Prime Video itself and Netflix, the home of the Studio Ghibli movies).

The first thing I did was finish season seven of MHA, but then I wanted to save the show's final season and spin-off, allowing myself time to explore what else there was in Crunchyroll's portfolio.

I make no bones about the fact that I suffer decision paralysis when being faced by too many options, but endlessly scrolling through the shows and movies I now had access to nearly melted my little brain.

I watched the first episodes (or two) of several almost random choices that looked like what I was looking for - which is really easy when episodes are a little over 20 minutes long - but found myself being extremely persnickety. They were good, but not EXACTLY what I was hunting for.

One thing I did quickly learn though is that I much prefer anime that's dubbed into English. When I was watching Japanese language shows I found the subtitles were changing much too fast and I couldn't keep-up and was also missing the visuals while trying to read.

This is odd because I watch subtitled movies and a lot of Japanese documentaries on NHK World-Japan and have no issue with their subtitles.

I've currently settled on The Water Magician, which is - so far - an easy-going isekai serial with 12 episodes in its first season.

Being a lifelong fan of Alice in Wonderland and The Wizard of Oz, I'm interested in the the isekai genre as it's something I've often thought about introducing - somehow - into a roleplaying game set-up. A number of recent Japanese-inspired systems I've been looking at fully embrace the idea of "people from our world finding themselves in a fantasy world".

Of course, I've now found my own fantasy world - Crunchyroll - and may be lost for some time as I ferret around to find the magical MacGuffin that will solve all my problems... or give me the inspiration I need for my next roleplaying campaign.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

And So Begins The End of My Hero Academia


The final season of top-notch superhero anime My Hero Academia begins on October 4 in Japan.

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Now THIS Is How You Do A Title Sequence


Check out the super-charged opening credits for the My Hero Academia spin-off My Hero Academia: Vigilantes.

The show's theme song, Kekka Orai, is performed by Kocchi no Kento.

Below you will find the show's closing theme, Speed, performed by yutori.

Monday, March 10, 2025

School's Out, Vigilantes Are In


The official (and frenetic) trailer for My Hero Academia spin-off Vigilantes, which begins airing next month (April 7).
My pop culture Odyssey: a slice of super-powered geek life with heavy emphasis on pulp adventure, superheroes, comic books, westerns, horror, sci-fi, giant monsters, zombies etc