

Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho
鬼人幻燈抄
After Jinta and Suzune ran away from their home as children, they were taken in by Motoharu—the virtuous sentinel of Kadono Village—and his daughter, Shirayuki. The settlement was ruled by its shrine maiden, Itsukihime, whom only a select few were allowed to interact with. When Itsukihime passed away, Shirayuki was appointed in her place. Wishing to stay in contact with her, Jinta worked diligently for years and was finally selected as the next sentinel. As the protector of the village, Jinta's duty is to eliminate any threats. One day, he encounters a demon in a nearby forest. At the end of the battle, the demon makes a proclamation about the destined ruler of all demonkind. He attaches his severed arm to Jinta, turning him into an unaging demon man. By the time Jinta comes to, Kadono is on fire. Suzune has transformed into the demon from the divination, and due to a series of misunderstandings, she murders Shirayuki and flees. Devastated, Jinta cannot forgive Suzune for her actions; he departs on a journey to find her. As Jinta travels around Japan across the eras, he endeavors to protect as many people as possible from aggressive demons. In his quiet moments, he contemplates what he should do when he once again faces his childhood friend. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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god_of_the_gods
October 2, 2025
One of the most “beautiful” anime I have watched in quite a while! The setting, the music, the feelings...really beautiful. It's demon slayer alt, it's something entirely different. If the animation was not complete, utter trash (90% of the time) I would have probably given it more. It also has some issues with connecting the timeline, some events, the whole thing could have been done a bit better, but I give it an 8 because of the beauty it has. I love the stoic Jinta and his evolution as a character. if you don't mind the rubbish animation, this anime can take you for a ride!
RomanRonin
October 1, 2025
After Jinta and Suzune ran away from their home as children, they were taken in by Motoharu—the virtuous sentinel of Kadono Village—and his daughter, Shirayuki. The settlement was ruled by its shrine maiden, Itsukihime, whom only a select few were allowed to interact with. When Itsukihime passed away, Shirayuki was appointed in her place. Wishing to stay in contact with her, Jinta worked diligently for years and was finally selected as the next sentinel. As the protector of the village, Jinta's duty is to eliminate any threats. One day, he encounters a demon in a nearby forest. At the end of the battle, the demon makes a proclamation about the destined ruler of all demonkind. He attaches his severed arm to Jinta, turning him into an unaging demon man. By the time Jinta comes to, Kadono is on fire. Suzune has transformed into the demon from the divination, and due to a series of misunderstandings, she murders Shirayuki and flees. Devastated, Jinta cannot forgive Suzune for her actions; he departs on a journey to find her. As Jinta travels around Japan across the eras, he endeavors to protect as many people as possible from aggressive demons. In his quiet moments, he contemplates what he should do when he once again faces his childhood friend. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
Rarely has a show been so short-changed by its production quality. On the basis of its story alone, Kijin Gentosho had the potential to really make a name for itself. The story follows Jinta, a swordsman from the Bakumitsu era who, without spoiling details, becomes entangled with supernatural affairs that significantly prolongs his life. A prophecy awaits in the long-distant future of the modern era, but that's not what this first season is about. Instead, we get to follow Jinta throughout the time leading up to the modern era, and see him develop as a character as he comes to grips with the inevitability ofthe passage of time, and his peculiar outside perspective of it. In this, the show repeatedly approaches time as a narrative concept in various unique and refreshing ways that I personally haven't seen in anime before. Now, the plot isn't perfect. There are some narrative short-cuts, and some characters feel oblivious at times for the sake of preserving particular mysteries until their intended reveals. These are minor discrepancies however and normally they wouldn't impact my final score of a show. However, there is a much bigger elephant in the room, and it's the reason why I believe this show is among the most wasted potentials in all of anime history. I'll be bluntly clear: the production quality of Yokohama was abysmal. The art direction was generic and stale. The animation itself felt static and clay-like, with fight scenes feeling like they were animated on a stack of Post-It notes. And this isn't even to mention the further falloff in the second half of the season: if the first half was bad, the second half was historically terrible. Most scenes were reduced to static depictions of characters speaking with no real additional movement, and even then characters were roughly rendered in a lower-quality artstyle as if the production itself was rushed to complete. Even worse, some scenes started to not even be fully animated at all, with backgrounds being left unfinished in the initial release. You'd think this, while a tragedy, is still fine to put up with in exchange for such a great story, but that's why the otherwise minor shortcomings in the story are more notable. It doesn't help that the greater issues with the plot begin to arise in the second half, particularly with how weak Jinta seems relative to his age. It's not a battle shounen, but Jinta is actually pathetically weak for what he is. Again, this would be a minor discrepancy, but taken together with the poor animation, it becomes more noticeable to the point of being grating. I have a feeling that based on the visual production quality that these story defects are also in part Yokohama's fault, so I think I'm going to continue the story in its original source material. I recommend as much, and while the show still has some good moments, it's akin to coal mining in order to find an artificial diamond: it's just not really worth the effort.
nome_criativo_1
September 29, 2025
I’ll get straight to the point: the first episode was really good, but that’s all the anime has going for it. It kept getting worse with each episode. With 24 episodes, you’d think they would develop a solid story, but instead, it’s just a bunch of mini-arcs that don’t really connect. The most connection you get is when a character shows up again after being introduced in a previous arc. It feels like the entire animation budget went into the first episode. By episode 21, it looked like they released it without even finishing the drawings. I don’t fully understand the animation process, but it wasclear they skipped some steps and delivered something incomplete. Even with 24 episodes, they never concluded the story, it was basically 24 episodes of filler. If you liked the first episode, just stop there and pretend it’s a short movie, because the rest of the series doesn’t live up to what was shown in the beginning.
SgtRohn
September 29, 2025
Demons in ancient Japan? Check. Conflict between humans and demons in ancient Japan? Check. Swordsmiths, samurais, or warriors training to be demon slayers in ancient Japan? Also check. All this would have you reaching of the same conclusion I'd had when I first saw glance of this anime: that this is Kimetsu no Yaiba 2.0 with the same story beats, same characters, same story, hell same themes even. And I wouldn't blame you. It's appearance is indeed quite deceiving at first glance. However, I'm here to tell you that you would be wrong. Ooohh boy, sorely wrong. If you wanted to watch this, expecting something like Kimetsu noYaiba, you'll be disappointed. Not to slander Kimetsu no Yaiba (and not that I don't like it, in fact I've rated it quite high here on MAL too), but this anime has more to offer than just the eyecandy and animation that Kimetsu is known for. A better comparison, or rather analogy, on how to describe Kijin Gentosho would be something like Kimetsu no Yaiba × Frieren. "But how does that make any sense?", you ask. Frieren has the eponymous protagonist fightings against demons, the same that Kimetsu no Yaiba's Kamado Tanjiro has, so how does that analogy works? Well, you take the depth, the struggles, the emotional beats, and the lessons that Frieren has for its audience, and mix it with the setting that Kimetsu no Yaiba has, while expanding beyond just shallow Demons vs Humans plot and that's Kijin Gentosho. Kijin Gentosho is a masterclass on how storytelling is done. It ties together history, emotion, and the struggles of a human person to tell the beautiful story of the human-turned-demon protagonist Jinta/Jinya. What appears as simple humans vs demons story at first glance, quickly evolves into something much more mature than just regurgitated good vs evil story. It doesn't rely on flashy, bright action sequences with powers shouting to tell its story, instead layering in story beats like an onion and plays with its strength. It doesn't take its audience for a fool, expecting them to pick up the cinematic themes and complexity that the story has to endear them to its story, which is something I really appreciate these days. There's no in-your-face emotional-manipulation-flashback-before-character-dies that Kimetsu no Yaiba is known for, so the story will do its utmost to hit you in your emotional guts when it wants to, and by god they really do. Expanding on that analogy I made about how Kijin Gentosho is like a mix of Frieren × Kimetsu no Yaiba, Frieren has this somber and melancholic, yet hopeful tone that is present throughout its story. And all this lies in the similarities of their protagonists: their struggles, and the thematic display of how immortal life isn't as grand as we make it out to be. Jinya, like Freren (the character), is a long-lived being after becoming a demon. Both stories are consistent with their themes: despite being functionally immortal, their struggles are still as human as anyone. Jinya struggles to come to terms in failing to take action from the circumstances that led him to who he is today, and Frieren struggles with failing to connect with his friends when they were still alive, thus starting her journey of meeting with them again one last time. Jinya's struggles is shown to the audience quite often, especially when he has to interact with his fellow demons, and the show hammers on that point a lot: a sense of belongingness, family, and dealing with his emotions being part of his journey towards his goal. Speaking of the characters, I gotta give credit to the author for this. Throughout the 25 episodes, none of them ever felt annoying, repetitive, or stand out in a bad way. They're all well-developed. It's one of the strengths that this show plays well. The author knows when it's time for a character to be on the spotlight, they know when to bench them for future episodes, and they know how to give a good payoff when a character arc or journey is at an end. I'd even go as far as to say that the characters are one of the reasons you should watch this anime. Each one of them feels human, since you understand their struggles, you understand their motivations, and its easy to sympathize and feel for their conflict throughout the story. Now, I'd happily glaze this anime to hell and back, because it's so terribly under-the-radar and underrated. Hell, I'd even vote for it as Anime of the Year for its story alone. HOWEVER, there is one thing that holds this anime back. As evidenced by Kimetsu no Yaiba and Solo Leveling, a good anime doesn't need to have a good story, but give it a lot of care production and animation-wise, and you'll get people flocking to it because of how flashy it is. And that's one department that Kijin Gentosho falls behind. The animation doesn't really do this anime justice. A lot of panning, inconsistent art style, hell even at one point, backgrounds looked unfinished. If you haven't noticed yet, then I'll tell you now that the studio responsible for the anime is Yokohama Animation Laboratory. If you're not familiar, some of the animes under their portfolio include The New Gate, Hametsu no Oukoku, and more infamously, Whisper Me A Love Song. Those are animes that went through production hell and/or delays during their run. And Kijin Gentosho almost went through the same thing. It got delayed near the end of its run, though luckily it wasn't as bad as Whisper Me A Love Song. This suggests that YAL must've had production issues as well near the end. Surprisingly, it didn't seem so obvious at first during the first cour of this anime. Still, and I can't say this enough, this anime's storytelling is top-notch. If you want an anime that is profound, and is a masterful at writing its characters, don't look far. Kijin Gentosho is the anime for you. Besides, animation issues didn't really rear its head much until near the end of the anime. Hopefully, you can overlook that and watch this anime, because I so badly want a Season 2 for this anime, and the only way we get that is to have more people appreciate this anime.
YanniktheYordle
October 1, 2025
If you watched ep1(50min) and wanted to see how it goes on, prepare for a huge disappointment. Nothing happens with the started storyline since every ep stands on its own. Some "arcs" are two episodes long, but once one is finished you notice it added nothing to the story or characters. You think it will be a revenge anime, an anime about the MC which will experience an interesting journey? - WRONG! Mid way I literally watched it on 2x speed since as mentioned; nothing happens. I hoped that maybe the final episodes will continue where ep1 left off but no. You could skip every second episodeand there will be no progress in any form. There is so much useless talking about nothing in always the same locations but at the end again, nothing of importance happens. Some characters appear multiple times and it has a twist that is kinda interesting the first time it happens, but as you can guess, nothing special that hooks you. 'Nothing' is the word for this anime. You get nothing when you want the story of ep1 to continue. You get nothing when you want some story at all. You get nothing when it comes to character development or their personalities(only stereotype characters). You get nothing special when it comes to voice acting. You get nothing when it comes to steady animation quality. The first two eps are good, but then it just goes constantly downhill, even in the middle of some eps you see the quality drop, I just say ep4 bridge fight. THE thing you get when watching this is just nothing. How it gets a score above 5 is beyond me, especially when you think about how it started and what potential it had. But the execution is beyond bad and boring, which means I also blame the work this anime is based on, since I don't believe the studio would change the story to this unappealing nothingness.
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