

Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World?
なぜ僕の世界を誰も覚えていないのか?
In a war against four overpowered races—angels, demons, undeads, and humanoid beasts—humanity could only prevail thanks to its champion Sid, who defeated the other races' champions and sealed away their armies in four pyramids. In an age where Sid's existence has become but a legend of the past, Kai Sakura Vento is one of the many conscripts tasked with monitoring the pyramids in fear that these old foes would escape. On a peaceful day while spending time with his friend Jeanne E. Anise, the world is suddenly "overwritten," transporting Kai to an alternate reality where humanity has nearly been annihilated by the demons and forced into hiding. To make matters worse, his very existence has been erased from this world; all of his friends, including Jeanne, who leads the local resistance efforts in this world, have forgotten about him. Trying to investigate the remains of his former world, Kai encounters Rinne, an enigmatic young woman trapped in a pyramid. Mysteriously inheriting Sid's legendary sword Codeholder, Kai manages to free Rinne from her imprisonment. Determined to fix this reality, Kai joins forces with Rinne and Jeanne to free humanity from demonic rule. But if the valiant soldier wants to have a chance at returning to his original world, he will first have to uncover the cause behind the mysterious alteration of reality. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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Marinate1016
September 28, 2024
The third of Sazane Kei’s to get an anime is actually the best in my opinion. Nazeboku had a really cool alternate timeline gimmick, mystery, characters and atmosphere that just hooked me from the start. What it lacks in animation quality it made up for in narrative and was really an entertaining watch. It’s not the best fantasy story in the world, but you know it has that “it” factor that I just liked and wanted more week after week. Admittedly very sad to see this one end with all the questions I still have about the world! Imagine you’re going about your daily life asusual and all of a sudden the world completely changes and no one remembers you despite all the same people you remember being around. Scary right? That’s basically the set up of this series and Kai’s journey to solve the mystery of “world reincarnation”. It was something I hadn’t seen before in an anime so in a sea of other fantasy shows it stood out a bit. Yea, Kai is OP, but he’s got limited allies and knowledge in this world so the whole appeal is seeing him reconnect with people he knew from the past timeline, explain to them the situation and enlist their help in saving the world. Humans who were originally the dominant species in his last world are now being hunted to near extinction with small pockets of humanity still fighting back against the various factions who want them dead. It had a bit of terminator salvation going on and I loved that. I’m a sucker for humanity on its last legs fighting back against near insurmountable odds and seeing Kai turn the tide of the war with his knowledge was cool. The characters are the highlight though. I think this had one of the more underrated casts this season. Jeanne, Reiren, Rinne etc were all powerful and competent and just made for a really fun travelling party dynamic. I love the classic fantasy trope of setting off on a long journey together and this show nailed that. It does start to get a little harem-y at the end, but it wasn’t like most seasonal anime so if you’re someone who’s grown a little tired of every girl falling in love with the MC, you’re mainly in the clear here. I also think the ones who do like the MC have a genuine reason for it, it’s not just because he was nice to them or something. Lot of fun banter between everyone, the jokes landed for me and they really did feel like a family. The one thing I didn’t like in terms of the cast is just how some fights with them were handled. Like Kai has a weapon that’s supposed to be a god tier relic and is strong as hell, yet he will leave Jeanne on her own to fight with a weapon that drains her life? This happened on a couple occasions and I was genuinely perplexed. Like I get wanting your female characters to be bad ass, but man don’t leave them to die like that. The only knocks against this show for me are the subpar production values and the fact it ended with me still having so many questions! This was a good fantasy story and I’m really dying to know more about the world reincarnation mystery. Seems like third time’s the charm for Sazane sensei, he really did a good job here. Nazeboku gets 8 out of 10.
In a war against four overpowered races—angels, demons, undeads, and humanoid beasts—humanity could only prevail thanks to its champion Sid, who defeated the other races' champions and sealed away their armies in four pyramids. In an age where Sid's existence has become but a legend of the past, Kai Sakura Vento is one of the many conscripts tasked with monitoring the pyramids in fear that these old foes would escape. On a peaceful day while spending time with his friend Jeanne E. Anise, the world is suddenly "overwritten," transporting Kai to an alternate reality where humanity has nearly been annihilated by the demons and forced into hiding. To make matters worse, his very existence has been erased from this world; all of his friends, including Jeanne, who leads the local resistance efforts in this world, have forgotten about him. Trying to investigate the remains of his former world, Kai encounters Rinne, an enigmatic young woman trapped in a pyramid. Mysteriously inheriting Sid's legendary sword Codeholder, Kai manages to free Rinne from her imprisonment. Determined to fix this reality, Kai joins forces with Rinne and Jeanne to free humanity from demonic rule. But if the valiant soldier wants to have a chance at returning to his original world, he will first have to uncover the cause behind the mysterious alteration of reality. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
giffey6
September 28, 2024
I feel like this was just one of the shows that existed this season. It never made a strong impact either way. Neither negative or positive feelings. It was no, it was there, and I wasn’t having a bad time. That’s about all I can really say about it, in all honesty. The story was strange. A multi-species war breaks out, and the humans won. Oh wait, our mostly soulless protag gets taken to another world where it’s the same people, but the outcome of the war changes, and only he remembers what happened in the other world. Obviously the story gets a bit more advancedthan that eventually, but that’s the general idea. The problem is the story never really feels like it matters much. It just kinda checks the boxes and keeps moving never really stopping to let it all sink in. Cute girl, onto the next battle. Introduce characters just enough to make you not completely disinterested, and then onto the next action scene. As far as safe seasonal shows go, this really wasn’t al too bad. I just can’t really recommend it fully as for everything this does I think other shows do better. In fact Our Last Crusade… the author’s other offering I feel like is much better and it unfortunately got delayed.
KANLen09
September 28, 2024
Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World? - Oh Dear Good God, Kei Sazane. Finally, you have a story of your very own, but why does it have to look like dogshit when compared to your other works, which, despite having a tad better production, are absolute mediocrities overall? Man, what a shame. Sorry, forgive me for that rant. If you've been in the AniManga scene since the COVID era, you might've caught a glance at one particular show called Kimi to Boku no Saigo no Senjou, Aruiwa Sekai ga Hajimaru Seisen a.k.a Our Last Crusade or the Rise of a New World (or shortenedto KimiSen). Written by novelist Kei Sazane, the anime came out in Fall 2020, that tells of a Romeo and Juilet-inspired story in a fantasy world. Needless to say, I was one of a handful of people who hated the show outright for it trying to be "innovative" in its concept, but rehashing the author's tried-and-true tropes of just about every cliche known to man, so much so that the entire anime was an absolute cringefest to sit through the seasonal worth of its 12 episodes. Come this year of 2024, and Kei Sazane is raking in more fame and (mostly bad) recognition, because this copy-paste imitation of an author has 3 of his most recent works under his belt being made into anime: the continuation of KimiSen into Season 2, last season's No Game, No Life ripoff (or more similarly of last Summer's Liar, Liar) of Kami wa Game ni Ueteiru. a.k.a Gods' Games We Play, and the work that out of the 3, that I REALLY wanted all the more to succeed: Naze Boku no Sekai wo Daremo Oboeteinai no ka? a.k.a Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World?, the most "original" work that Kei Sazane has ever done, even if it's by no means innovative in the fantasy genre. You've gotta hand it to this man, at least he tried something different for his own "unique flavour" that stands out in his copy-paste biography of works over the last decade or so, and I'm relieved that for once, by his own standards, Kei Sazane got that formula right out of the gate. What started out as your typical war between humans and other entities of races you can only find in fantasy novels and the like, suddenly gets shifted into a time paradigm where the war that's won by the humans and led by its titular hero character, is overwritten to the point that humans never existed in the alternate world. This is the plot device of MC Kai Sakura-Vento, a soldier of the existing Urza Federation who enjoyed the prosperity after humanity's hero of the Prophet Sid did the deed to render humanity as winners of the Great War of the Five Races, alongside his comrades of Ashran Highroll, Saki Miscotti, and his childhood friend of Jeanne E. Anis, whom he fought alongside the war, with whom the latter of the 3 he's bonded quite a lot to be potential future partners. The suddenness to have his world be mysteriously distorted in no time to assimilate, forcibly leaving the comfort of Jeanne and the new world and encountering another world where humans are not at the top nor bottom, but non-existing in the Great War, he is the only one who's sane (or insane, depending on the worldview) who has an inkling of Prophet Sid, and as the title goes: no one truly remembers who Kai is in the alternate world. It's up to him to find out what tracks this perverse course of action that renders the people he knows into complete strangers, and what exactly does his alternate world have in store for him retracing the Great War of the Five Races once again, only this time with some help that could get the alternate world back on track with the events of his world. Being the only one who remembers all that is within his old world, Kai slowly is aware of the events that he is part of, never truly got off the ground in the alternate world that knows no inkling of neither him nor the Prophet Sid at all. It's only when he meets the mysterious demon of Rinne, all chained up at what seems to be Heaven, as well as the sword that was imbued to him: Code Holder (that once belonged to Prophet Sid), Kai begins to slowly piece the sequence of events of humanity's speckle in a world where demons have truly taken over its timeline. And out of all the characters, even in the list of many "couple" MCs that Kei Sazane has put out so far, Kai and Rinne are the most passive when compared to KimiSen's Iska and Aliceliese, as well as Kami wa Game's Fay Theo Philus and Leoleshea. What's up with creating characters so backwards that you need extra characters to help progress him and her forward, This is not how you want to paint your central characters, especially for a world that's this elaborate, intricate, and, IMO, a decent sci-fi and power fantasy action series that has content to stand on its own heft. Most of the time, it feels like Kai and Rinne were forced into the alternate world just to make amends for the right course of action, as they meet characters from other races and align the correct vision against all odds, no matter how fearsome their opponents are. And one of them is Last Riser: the entity of anomaly who reacts to Sid's sword whenever it's used, that is akin to a moderator when things of Kai's world (such as Sid's name) are registered as taboo words that should not be said, and anyone who utters even just a minute of the word gets forcibly erased from the world, adding another layer into an already complex war that Kai, Jeanne and the others have to go through the same-old once again. To be clear, the story itself is fine and serviceable (and actually worth a second look), but Kai and Rinne have a lot of ways to go and gain ground if they truly want to stand out, and so far within the anime that's part of the already completed LN that ended back in August 2020, they've just been stuck like players who need to be fed quests to progress their plot forward. As I've said, it's truly a missed opportunity to have characters just be there to service its plot and not do more on their behalf, which unfortunately is the result of Kei Sazane himself prioritizing the wrong things for the right stuff. If anything, characters can make up for the lack of story, but not the other way around, and this show unfortunately is the sum of many errors that could make a potential difference. Oof, woe is Project No. 9 having an enigma of a Summer season adapting 2 shows in the same season, but the same 2 shows that have a very noticeable difference when compared against one another. While Senpai wa Otokonoko a.k.a Senpai Is an Otokonoko had Aniplex's backing, which allowed the anime to be marginally expressive to the point of being impressive thanks to the conglomerate's big budget, it's the complete opposite for this show where the coined "low-budget" term really comes into play. From the mediocre visuals to the horrible animation, it feels as if I have to second guess if I'm watching the exact same show of low expectations when it comes to production values to begin with. For sure, this is one of the worst produced shows of the season, and it's quite the jarring expose to watch a show so drab and dysfunctional. The year 2024 also brings all Kei Sazane works the affiliation with musical project Sizuk and J-Pop "hybride rock band" AliA, and if you're the type to like modern rock music, look no further than KimiSen's sequel season and Kami wa Game for that. But their music is just not to my tastes, and they're replaced by symphonic power metal band Unlucky Morpheus, whose OP song while being a fit to the show's themes, sounds average overall, but I'd argue that I'll take any song that's n Sizuk nor AliA any day. It truly pains me to say that Naze Boku no Sekai wo Daremo Oboeteinai no ka? a.k.a Why Does Nobody Remember Me in This World?, while being the best work that Kei Sazane has ever done in recent years, the manga adaptation of the LN is a much better alternative to what the anime has shown us for the past 3 months. And as someone who legitimately trashes the author for his copy-paste tactics, he may have gotten a rare case of a W in the story section, everything else is just a massive L for something that could've been a success, if only he'd cared with the rest to give it the proper treatment that it truly deserves. If you excuse me, I shall go and read the manga adaptation instead and let the anime adaptation be just a blip that came and went with an unpleasant taste to my eyes. Only watch this if you have the sanity to suffer through all 12 episodes of unabated subpar animation.
ramen_noods
November 15, 2024
I don't really write reviews but I really need to share my thoughts on this one. Not sure if spoiler alert, but storytelling was bad. The first and second halves were basically the same: mc and company raid the enemy base, each of them fights someone, mc and girl fight the main bad guy, sword gives him a power up, they win. The series tried too hard to be serious that all characters end up sounding monotone. The harem also seemed so unnecessary. I enjoy watching trash fantasy anime, but unlike those that everyone expects to be story-less, slice of life anime, made only for entertainment, this onehad an actual story but the execution sucked.
goldemarine
January 16, 2025
Review Title : A Confusing Plot with No Substance Right from the start, Naze Boku no Sekai wo Daremo Oboeteinai no ka? offers an intriguing idea, but sadly, it never completely fulfills its promise. The series begins with a concept that’s hard to comprehend, providing minimal clarity regarding the characters or the universe they live in. As the narrative unfolds, it grows more perplexing, causing the audience to feel unsure about what is genuinely at risk or the identities of the characters themselves. This absence of guidance, combined with limited character growth, hinders the ability to establish a genuine connection with the narrative. The main problem withthe first season lies in its emphasis on displaying the protagonist’s abilities without developing a substantial storyline or emotional richness. The narrative depends excessively on the main character's might, yet lacking significant development or understanding of the other characters, it appears superficial. The occurrences that transpire are frequently diminished to mere display, lacking any genuine sense of meaning or advancement. In the end, the series seems like a lost chance. The perplexing storyline, absence of character growth, and dependence on shallow action sequences result in it seeming like a series of hollow instances. For individuals seeking a narrative with meaning, complexity, and captivating characters, this is a series I would advise against watching.
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