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[personal profile] petronia
Made it through the St.-Rudolph matches. It's not that I don't enjoy it. Of course I do. But if it were something that I was following on TV every week for two-three years it wouldn't make me feel as if I were putting the rest of my (fannish) life on hold. ^^; To be honest, I don't have the stamina for long series. Of anime like Ranma 1/2 or Sailor Moon or Inu Yasha, I've seen only a few episodes if at all. And of story series... literally the only 50-odd episode series I've ever watched from beginning to end is Fushigi Yuugi, and that only the once. Never finished Kenshin, never finished Slayers, never finished Slam Dunk, never finished Get Backers, even. (I'm still compulsively saving a couple of episodes in the mid-40s. XD;;) And the horrific self-discipline it took to get through one run of both Weiss series...

FWIW the only things I've watched on North American TV for the past 4-5 years are award shows, sports and the occasional documentary or movie-of-the-week. The last series I followed consistently was The X-Files... season four. (And about half a season of American Idol, aha.) So I have a huge attention deficit for television in general, and the least distraction sends me running back to the printed page. XD If it's a series I like, I'll breeze through thirty volumes of manga and whine for the continuation.

So why watch TeniPuri? ...Well, because it's sparkly and it's there (thanks, Lux XD), but mostly because the two versions are very different**, and the anime is a lot more ficcable than the manga. In other words, data gathering. XD;;; I mean, obviously I don't have enough ficcage on my plate.

Was reading GB23 - in detail - and got through about a chapter and a half before my eyes gave out. -_-; Ayamine-sensei needs to lay off the skinny pens. I can't differentiate between the foreground and background anymore, jaw-droppingly gorgeous though the toning might be. (Oh, and he knows the kid in Akabane's flashback looks like little Ginji. "It wasn't planned," quoth he, "I drew him like that without thinking. But maybe we'll work it into the story somehow. What with Semimaru and Akabane being connected, which is like a recipe for confusion." Mmm, I do love how the creators know exactly what they're doing ahead of time! XD;;)

**Or my reactions are different. I chugged through the St.-R chapters of the manga on the steam of my virulent hatred for Mizuki, but somehow I can't muster up the h4t3 for his anime incarnation. Ishida Akira's giggling disarms me - that and the hair-twirling. Or maybe it's just that I know how it ends. ^^; Much more is shown of the psychology and family history between Fuji and Yuuta, to the effect that's it's actually rather different from what I'd assumed from the manga. Makes me feel even more sorry for them. ;_; (I have a tendency to identify with the aniki/niisan characters in animanga - for some reason there are very few protective older-sister charas. To me the idea of having a little brother who doesn't want to be one's little brother is the saddest thing ever, and the more so because it's no one's fault.)

Date: 2004-01-05 11:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] worldserpent.livejournal.com
Heh heh. It's just that I don't like that expression on her face; she always is....worried. Even if there is absolutely nothing to be anxious about. It got to the point in the anime that I was mentally urging Sakuno to act more like Tomoko, and stop cringing at everything.

Tezuka vs. Fuji: Okay, Tezuka has Zero-shiki and Tezuka zone, and Fuji has the Cut Serve and the Triple Counters. The problem is that we have never seen Fuji seriously tested in singles. So we've had it written in that Tezuka and Fuji have unreturnable counters, but they can be dealt with by sealing them as to not give the other person an opportunity to get them off, or by hitting them before they hit the ground and slide along it or go backwards. So I assume that both Tezuka and Fuji would find a way to deal with each other's special moves. (I'm avoiding spoilers here on how one might actually deal with Tsubame Gaeshi).

Tezuka Zone is more of a problem. Ryouma dealt with it by switching hands and being unsure of where exactly the ball was going to land, IIRC, but Fuji doesn't have that option. Inui also couldn't defeat Tezuka Zone because he hadn't seen it before. But Fuji has and so he might have already devised a strategy. (BTW, at this point in the manga I'm considering it somewhat probable that Ryouma might beat Fuji, because he's recently been really powered up)

Date: 2004-01-05 12:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] petronia.livejournal.com
Lessee... you can return Zero-shiki if you can see it coming from the 3mm drop like Inui can (WTF, I always say, but canon spaketh and we must follow -_-;). Higuma Otoshi is for countering a smash, which Tezuka typically doesn't rely on anyway. Hakugei seems to depend on the presence of a light wind (but if that's the case what did Fuji do when he had to change courts in the match against Jirou? He won six in a row then. Once again, no comment). And you tell me Tsubame Gaeshi has a counter. XD;; So that leaves the Vanishing Cut Serve (btw, isn't that also a sword technique something?) and Tezuka Zone. Hmm. *ponders some more*

Date: 2004-01-05 12:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] worldserpent.livejournal.com
Heh. Well, if Inui can do it, certainly Fuji can.

Hakugei: Er.... Fuji controls the wind. He has magical powers.

Tsubame gaeshi: Actually, it's not so much a counter as a method of sealing it, and Fuji eventually finds a way to overcome the seal, but that relies on some other factors too.

Cutserve/Tezuka Zone: No one has of yet managed to counter the Vanishing Cut serve, but people have returned other supposedly unreturnable serves. I figure we'd just hear something like, "Tezuka's superior tennis vision blah blah" and then Tezuka would be able to return it. (So far, who else has a serve that is really unreturnable?)

Date: 2004-01-05 01:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] petronia.livejournal.com
Ohtori's Scud Serve, right? Didn't they win that match? You'd think I'd remember better. >_<

(Incidentally I do wub it when they do that. It's like in RPG boss fights when you think it's going well, and then the person you're fighting goes "WTF I must not lose, my insanity lends me strength!" and leaves you with 1 HP. -_-;)

Fuji rides the wind! Whotthehell, I figure I'll leave Tezuka Zone alone. It does have metaphoric value. *g*

Date: 2004-01-05 01:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] worldserpent.livejournal.com
Ohtori's scud serve, though, is highly flawed because it's constantly hitting the net because Ohtori lacks control.

(Yes, although it works better in sports if it's not a result of desperation but a calculated plan to dismay and discourage the opponent. Rikkai is very good at this. No one in Rikkai would be so overtly rose-petal-animation as to go around saying "be awed by my prowess!!" but they're good at forcing everyone to be awed.)

Tezuka Zone: Yeah, it does exist mostly on a metaphorical level.

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