

フォーチュン・クエスト ~世にも幸せな冒険者たち~
Fortune Quest is the tale of a bunch of adventurers. Imagine your classic D&D party—Fighter, Thief, Bard, Mage, Healer ...and Porter? Okay, don't know where the Porter comes from, but Pastel and her group of adventurers are broke and need a job. They can't afford to buy any of the adventure modules from the module seller, so they have to take part-time jobs to pay off their debts. And an innocent job to fetch holy water leads to world-threatening danger ...and a white dragon. (Source: AnimeNfo.com)
Fortune Quest is the tale of a bunch of adventurers. Imagine your classic D&D party—Fighter, Thief, Bard, Mage, Healer ...and Porter? Okay, don't know where the Porter comes from, but Pastel and her group of adventurers are broke and need a job. They can't afford to buy any of the adventure modules from the module seller, so they have to take part-time jobs to pay off their debts. And an innocent job to fetch holy water leads to world-threatening danger ...and a white dragon. (Source: AnimeNfo.com)
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ktulu007
May 23, 2018
Fortune Quest: Yo ni mo Shiawase na Boukensha-tachi is a JC staff anime based off of an eight volume light novel. It also has a SNES game, which you can't avoid knowing about if you watch the anime because they have a segment in the middle of every episode where they have a joke advert and then a real advert for the SNES game. And JC Staff is one of those studios that can hit lofty heights with the likes of Yami no Matsuei & Flying Witch and also mine the crustiest excrement with works like Shakugan no Shana or Garzey no Tsubasa.But hey, at least they've never made anything as horrendous as Evangelion. They've also had quite a few mediocre works. So, let's see where this one happens to land. Story: We open with our heroes having some financial problems. They decide to try and get a quest, which they can't pay for. So, they offer the quest giver a deal. He'll get a percentage of the profits from any treasure they find (he'll be disappointed when the RNG ends up with them finding a wooden dagger, a used condom and a Solid Snake Dakimakura with stains in odd spots) in exchange for the quest. He agrees, but first he gives them some simple work to get them out of debt. All they have to do is fetch some hot spring water. Before you can say “something will definitely go askew” things go wrong and the group finds themselves with a far more difficult job than they imagined. Who could have foreseen this besides everyone? The big issue with the series is simply that a lot of it is rather predictable. There might be one twist that you won't see coming a mile away. Most of the events that happen are just so bog standard that they're really obvious if you have any experience with fantasy works. Another issue is that the OVA is meant to be comedic but it's not all that funny. The jokes are just mundane. That being said, the OVA does have a strong aesthetic sense. It does manage to capture the whole “old school D&D inspired RPG” feel pretty nicely. And it does capture your attention pretty successfully. Don't imagine it could maintain that if it were much longer, but with four episodes it can manage. Characters: There isn't much to say about the cast. Clay is the leader. Pastel is the good, caring woman. Trapp is the one who causes friction. Knoll is the gentle giant. Rumy is the childish one. Kitton is the amnesiac who, oddly enough, knows the most about adventuring. Okay, let's be fair to the others. He only knows how to handle the shit they encounter because he carries a strategy guide. Oh, and the antagonist is basically motivated by boredom. I know how he feels. I always build doomsday devices and hold the world for ransom when my Internet goes down. Art: The OVA doesn't look bad. It's not good looking either. The action sequences are a bit lazy and the character designs aren't very interesting. They look like someone was trying to make the most generic D&D characters they could, except without the Drizzt clone because literally everyone hates the person who plays as a Drizzt clone. About the only exception is Shiro. He looks like a cuter, more canine version of Nall from Lunar Silver Star. Except this came out first, so I guess I should be saying Nall looks like a less cute, more feline version of Shiro. I actually do like Shiro's design. Sound: I can't really complain about the acting. They got some good people like Touma Yumi, Canna Nobutoshi, Nishihara Kumiko & Furukawa Toshio. I don't think anyone is going to point to this OVA as the best performance in any of their careers but they're perfectly capable. The music is all right. Ho-yay: There really isn't any. Maybe the series could develop some if the characters had compelling or somewhat complex interactions with one another, but that is not the case. It would have to be betwixt the lads, though, since there are only two major female characters and one is a child. Final Thoughts: Fortune Quest is not a bad series. If you're really starving for something short of the fantasy persuasion, it might serve you. But there are a lot of better fantasy comedies out there. JC Staff has been involved with at least two franchises that fit that description. The Slayers & Mahou Senshi Louie. That being said, it's not bad either. And there are probably as many fantasy franchises that are worse than it as there are better. So, again, if you're really desperate it probably won't be intolerable by any degree. For myself, I give it an indifferent 5/10. Next week, Witch Hunter Robin.
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HidamariSeashore
November 30, 2025
Okay, who here has played Dungeons and Dragons? From a few livestreamed DnD games that I've seen online, I know how chaotic DnD campaigns can be, specifically because of the people playing in that campaign. On my part, I haven't played DnD since high school, but it was years after graduating that I started keeping a list on Anime-Planet of anime that aren't fully available on the Internet in English; finding anime that qualify for that list and making sure it stays updated has been quite an adventure in itself. One long-standing member of that list is "Fortune Quest L", which only has five episodesavailable both subbed and dubbed. As it turns out, this isn't the first anime adaptation of the light novel series it's based on got. Before Fortune Quest L was released, there was a four-episode OVA series that actually did get the fully-English-subbed treatment - one that actually mentions DnD in its description. Can this OVA, "Fortune Quest: Yo ni mo Shiawase na Boukensha-tachi", be what inspires someone to seek out its sequel and make it more widely available? Well....I'm gonna be honest, I'm not sure if I see that happening. Fortune Quest: Yo ni mo Shiawase na Boukensha-tachi, or "Fortune Quest: The Happy-go-lucky Adventurers" in English (according to the fansubbers, anyway), follows one specific party reminiscent of those found in fantasy RPGs, led by swordsman Clay and including the likes of the thief Trapp and the mapper Pastel. Unfortunately, we do not find them in the best of positions for a party to be in; they're broke and in debt, meaning they can't buy any of the adventure modules to go on a quest. To earn some money, they take on a job to collect hot spring water from a town famous for it, but they soon discover that the water has all dried up. As it turns out, a white dragon dries up the water every ten years until a young boy is sacrificed each time; any time an adventurer sets off to kill the white dragon, they come back evil and cause chaos in the town. Nevertheless, our hapless heroes set off for the nearby dungeon to kill the white dragon....but all is not as it seems regarding this. As you can see, the Fortune Quest OVA (as I will be calling it from now on) tells a pretty standard fantasy story; I'm sure there are DnD players who have done a campaign exactly like this before. Nothing is really done to make it stand out from other fantasy stories, either. Sure, there are a few plot twists here and there, but anyone with any familiarity with DnD-inspired fantasy stories would be able to see those plot twists coming from a mile away. Granted, I didn't really see the villain's motivation for doing the things he did coming....but that motivation was also so stupid that it's not even funny. Speaking of which, the Fortune Quest OVA is mostly comedic, but while some jokes managed to make me grin a little, nothing really made me laugh. I really wanted to laugh at these jokes, as the fansubbers found the OVA series to be hilarious, but I couldn't honestly do so; that might just be a difference in senses of humor, though. The characters in Fortune Quest are nothing to write home about, either. I kind of thought Clay was the protagonist at first, given that he's the leader of the party, but he's mostly left on the sidelines throughout the series due to an injury he gets in the first episode; it's probably for the best, though, considering that he's either the least interesting or the second-least interesting of the party. I honestly can't decide whether he or Knoll is the least interesting; it doesn't really help that the latter doesn't get much to do, either, since he had to stay outside of the dungeon due to his large size and sent a bird after his fellow party members in his place. The protagonist actually seems to be Pastel, the mapper (who maps out the locations her party goes to, by the way), and while I wouldn't really say I like or hate her, she does have some fun chemistry with other characters, like Trapp and Shiro. Another party member, Kitton, seems like he could be an interesting character, but while there are some revelations made about him, there's not enough time to really explore it. Finally, there's the animation and sound, which are both pretty standard. The animation was done by J.C.Staff, who would certainly go on to work on better projects and turn out better results in the years to come; it wasn't terrible overall, but nothing animation-wise really sticks out. There are some illustrations that feel reminiscent of fantasy stories of the time it came out, though, which I liked. This OVA series doesn't have an opening theme, but there are two ending themes that are used throughout its run, neither of which are good nor bad. The first ending theme, "Fortune Quest: Itsuka Kanau Yume" by Rumi Kasahara, does stick out in my mind for having an instrumental remix that one might hear in an old RPG playing at different points throughout the series, though. The voice acting was pretty okay, too, with Trapp, in particular, having a pretty fitting voice provided by Toshio Furukawa. Just a warning, though: Kumiko Nishihara's voice that she does for Rumy might sound a little grating to some viewers due to how shrill it is. Overall, the Fortune Quest OVA wasn't quite that good, but if someone wanted to watch it, I won't stop them. It might inspire DnD DMs to create a campaign based on the adventure the main characters went on. It might not, however, inspire fansubbers to seek out episodes 6-26 of Fortune Quest L to give them the English-subtitled treatment. Oh, well. Maybe someday.
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