

Grimgar: Staking Our Youths on the Bath Wall - One More Centimeter
灰と幻想のグリムガル 「風呂上りの壁にかけた青春―one more センチメートル」
Special episode that will expand on the ending of episode 2 where the boys try to spy on the girls bathing.
Special episode that will expand on the ending of episode 2 where the boys try to spy on the girls bathing.
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ClownMilk
March 28, 2016
10/10, 100/100, 1000/1000. Its just episode 2.5, it doesn't contribute to the main story, its not something that teaches a lesson, its not about the struggle of overcoming your flaws or becoming closer to the people you care for. This is about heart. not love, not friendship or kindness, but of the heart of a true man. It is a story of the yearning of the soul, for what can never be attained, a story of the struggle of men, and doing what must be done. It isn't about winning or losing, nothing so juvenile. It is about doing what is right, and staying true toyourself. Those who cant understand the beauty of these eleven minutes, simply can not comprehend the heart of a true man.
PWAISE
March 6, 2018
Some reviewers claim this episode has nothing to do with the actual anime, or that it’s a mindless, shallow waste of 11 minutes. They are so fkn wrong! Let me explain! Yes, it’s only 11 minutes long. Yes, at first glance it looks like yet another bath-peeking, perverted filler episode that raises doubts about why it was made at all. But that surface impression is exactly the trap. Beneath the fan service is one of the most thematically dense moments in Hai to Gensou no Grimgar. This episode is not shallow—it is quietly empowering. This special only works if you’ve watched the original anime. Grimgar has alwaysbeen about reality: real consequences, real loss, real fear, real exhaustion. It strips the Isekai fantasy of its power fantasies and replaces them with weight—emotional, moral, existential weight. Survival is never glamorous. Life is fragile. Death is final. Purpose is unclear. This 11-minute episode continues that same vision, but instead of focusing on combat or survival mechanics, it turns inward. What it actually depicts is the characters’ internal and spiritual condition. By this point in the story, the group has endured confusion, loss, and genuine life-and-death trauma. Survival has stopped being a goal and has become their entire mode of existence. Eat. Fight. Sleep. Repeat. Living reduced to function. Humanity dulled by necessity. This episode interrupts that cycle. What emerges here is not lust for its own sake, but proof of life. Desire. Excitement. Anticipation. The ability to want something unnecessary for survival. That capacity—to hope, to dream, to feel alive beyond tomorrow—is what signals that they are still human. Purpose has been the group’s greatest struggle. With their memories erased, they have no narrative, no “why.” Survival becomes the default because it’s the only thing left. This episode breaks that paradigm. For the first time since arriving in this world, they experience desire that isn’t utilitarian. Something risky. Something foolish. Something human. “This is where our dream lies… let’s drink to that. To this moment. To being alive. Now let the curtains to our dream rise.” That line is the spine of the episode. Haruhiro speaks it after Ranta reframes what they’re experiencing. What initially feels like losing their humanity—lowering themselves to base instincts—is revealed as the opposite. Ranta insists they’ve won by losing. Their instincts, their hearts, have awakened. Haruhiro realizes that this desire is not degradation; it is evidence of life. They can still dream. They can still want. That ability had been buried under survival. This world had forced them into an inhuman rhythm—mechanical living, emotional numbness, purposeless endurance. In this episode, that breaks for the first time. They find a dream worth risking disappointment for. Something that contradicts the hollow life they’ve been living. Manato voices the fear beneath hope. Hope can fail. Desire can disappoint. Dreams expose limits. It is safer to never try than to try and learn that your best wasn’t enough. His hesitation is not cowardice—it’s realism. He understands the cost of hope. Moguzo answers that fear with action. He doesn’t hesitate. He steps forward, offering himself as the sacrifice, perfectly aligned with his role as the tank. “We can’t back off now.” That moment crystallizes Haruhiro’s realization: they are already alive. The fact that they’ve come this far means something has already changed. They are no longer just surviving. They are choosing. Conclusion This 11-minute special is easy to dismiss if you only see fan service and ecchi humor. That camouflage is intentional. Beneath it lies a sharp meditation on purpose, fear, desire, and what it means to be alive. It doesn’t ask whether the characters will succeed. It asks whether they are still human. Most people missed it. That doesn’t make this episode weak. It makes it precise.
gomi_panda
March 25, 2016
Not even worth a watch, doesn't brings anything new to the story or even character development, well besides making the male cast look more immature and juvenile. Weird and awkward dialogues doesn't make it easier to watch and they're painful to go through. Animation is average and nothing special, but what can you expect from something that it's only 11 minutes long? As for the music, well it's annoying and unbearable to listen to and the whole idea for it it's just pathetic and stupid. A very poor attempt to show series in a new light and make it funny. A prime example of an animated garbage andwaste of time, avoid by any cost, there are far better special's out there for far better series that offers more enjoyment.
mellekilla19
March 24, 2016
This was a nice little extra to enjoy, didn't take anything from the anime itself, built slightly onto the end of an episode, and made a nice, though forgettable comedic extra. The Beatboxing at the start of the episode set the light for it, the fact it wasn't supposed to be taken seriously, and it was just a lighthearted gesture to cheer people up due to things that happen later in the anime, allowing us a soft respite of laughter from a otherwise rather serious and dark anime. All in all, if you want a laugh, give it a watch, it's only 11 minutes long so whatdo you have to lose?
fender-3
April 12, 2021
It is the very philosophical question to life, this episode here. The carnal desires of man, what makes us truly human. Y'see, I would be doing not only myself, but also the MyAnimeList community a complete, total, utter disservice if I were to give this episode right here anything less than a 10/10, and so that is what I shall give. Sure sure, this episode may not offer any progression to the story, and may just be some fanservice or a filler extension of the episodes, and has no true depth to the story whatsoever, that being said we get to relate to the fourmain male protagonists on a personal- no, on a heart to heart level in all 11 minutes here. Is this mini-episode crucial to the story? No, I would not say so. Is it enjoyable regardless? Oh, yes.
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