

シキザクラ
Shikizakura: where cherry blossoms are in full bloom while trees are colored with autumn leaves. In this special place, where the transient world meets the spirit world, a ritual to save humanity is about to begin... High school student Kakeru Miwa, by a strange turn of events, winds up being an irregular member of a power suit team tasked with battling Oni. These Oni possess humans and try to cling to the transient world. Only the power suit, Yoroi, which combines ancient secrets with the latest technology, can protect people from Oni. Kakeru decides to become a hero who will battle Oni and protect Ouka Myoujin, the shrine maiden fated with saving the world. Shikizakura season. Ouka dances as a shrine maiden in autumn leaves and cherry blossoms. Heroic action—where the past and the future, the transient world and the spirit world, thoughts and wishes, all intersect—begins here! (Source: MAL News)
Shikizakura: where cherry blossoms are in full bloom while trees are colored with autumn leaves. In this special place, where the transient world meets the spirit world, a ritual to save humanity is about to begin... High school student Kakeru Miwa, by a strange turn of events, winds up being an irregular member of a power suit team tasked with battling Oni. These Oni possess humans and try to cling to the transient world. Only the power suit, Yoroi, which combines ancient secrets with the latest technology, can protect people from Oni. Kakeru decides to become a hero who will battle Oni and protect Ouka Myoujin, the shrine maiden fated with saving the world. Shikizakura season. Ouka dances as a shrine maiden in autumn leaves and cherry blossoms. Heroic action—where the past and the future, the transient world and the spirit world, thoughts and wishes, all intersect—begins here! (Source: MAL News)
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Supporting
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TevishSzat
December 26, 2021
Shikizakura is, at heart, a kind of cheesy and overall optimistic heroic action show. It wears its genre openly and proudly, and goes ahead and takes the cliches it thinks it can use. All the same, this show is weirdly charming. Sometimes, when something is very much in its genre comfort zone, you get the feeling like it's lazy, or on autopilot. At least after the first couple episodes when you don't necessarily know what to expect from it, Shikizakura isn't like that. It's an extremely earnest show, in a sense, and there's a passion in it to capture the great feelingof heroic media, which ultimately means playing many of the conventions quite straight. I do, in particular, have to give praise to the small moments. A lot of the broader strokes of the show are things you've seen before, so that once you identify which set of conventions you're looking at, you kind of know what to expect. But, in defiance of that, the characters are at least a bit nuanced. The leads (Kakeru and Oka) have good chemistry that's built up over time and through grace notes in a lot of scenes. The supporting cast have their own issues, and while they do talk about them as well, they also show what they're feeling through smaller cues, which is something that it takes skill above and beyond the call of schlock duty to accomplish. That, in particular, makes Shikizakura more memorable and fills it with more personality than might be anticipated. It plays things safer and more standard than perhaps it could have, but the characters at least do have their own identities and... there's nothing wrong with being straightforward sometimes. It's, in a sense, something I think would make a good comfort food show, the kind of thing you watch when you've had it up to your ears with dark, depressing, and grim fare and just want a story where you can lose yourself in something that's brighter and more approachable without going so far as to be cloying or pandering. There's enough conflict and darkness in here that the show does have meat to it, even if the tone and feel tell you fairly clearly that you're not watching a tragedy this time. It's not a masterpiece but it's got some good action, some good characters, and enough story and technical competence to hold it all together. If you can accept it for what it is, you'll probably have a good time with this show, and I find myself having rather warm thoughts for the whole thing despite its flaws.
jus7aguy
November 10, 2022
Animation was up and down. Jumping between CGI rendering and regular. The regular was fine, not outstanding but adequate, however I'm not sure if they were using the rendered for time purposes or what, but it was not great most of the places it was used and pulled you out of paying attention to what was happening, just by how wrong what was happening looked. Story wise again hit and miss, there is the potential for something great, but it feels like it missed whatever it was aiming for. Character development was actually done okay, but lots of threads left hanging. Ifeel like they had a lot more to tell and not the time to flesh it out right to tell it. There was a lot that you had to infer, from some very half-baked factors. I didn't hate this series, but I wouldn't recommend it either. Might work better in another format. I'm only rating this a 5/10, average. It's probably more a 5.5 but I feel more comfortable dropping this one down than bumping it up. Honestly the only character that made the show was the best friend. I feel he was done just perfectly, Maybe a bit to mature for a highschool student, but his interactions, his relationships, and his tone were spot on.
AkaneYakumo
January 1, 2022
You guys ever seen Kamen Rider recently? Felt like you want to catch up on the past 3 seasons but are unable to cram more than 3 years worth of content within a 6 hour view time? Well give Shikizakura a try! It has all three of the Kamen Rider seasons from the Reiwa era on a convenient 12 episode package. It has the art direction of Zero-One, the story of Saber, and the premise of Revice. Though despite that, Shikizakura is an enjoyable show in and of itself. It's an homage to the transforming hero genre, and it's a title I can full heartedly recommendto any fan of tokusatsu media. I give this my big ups.
Hivoldep42
January 8, 2022
So, Shikizakura huh, it is very less likely that you are here, without being interested in the show, so I would like to present what the show can and cannot offer. Thanks for Reading in advance. The story for the show is told in a very complicated manner. What I mean by that is, that the main progression of the story is fairly simple along with the happenings, but the actual reason to why the things that are happening, and why are certain things being pursued is complicated, which might be confusiing. Therefore, 5 /10 for the story. The only good thing that I find about thisshow is that the sound is really good. Like the EDM tracks during the fight scenes, along with the ED, are quality songs, and that is what elevated the fights to a higher level. So yeah, 8/10 for the sound. From the above, it is also clear that there are no standout characteres who drive the show except 1 or 2 people. But even so, the events that are happening give enough enjoyment to go through the whole thing. Therefore, 3/10 for the characters and 4/10 for the enjoyment. The animation was heavily CG based but that does not take away from the enjoyment, all the scenes are fairly well done. The art is nothing special too. So overall for art and animation, it is a 4/10. Overall, shikizakura is a mecha anime, with kind of a complicated backdrop, light progression, okayish art, good fights with music, and a good ED. Hope this helps you decide if you want to give it chance.
Rank
#11383
Popularity
#5637
Members
18,403
Favorites
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Episodes
12