So the latest and final season of Game of
Thrones is here and is wrapping up after 9
years.
There are still no new books yet, but whether
or not you feel satisfied at the conclusion
of this epic storyline,
"And are you happy with how, things ended?"
*nervous laughter*
"BEST SEASON EVER!"
either way when it’s over it’s over.
So now is the time to have a look at what
else you could watch to fill the gap left
behind.
And, if I may be so bold,
may I suggest some anime?
Because for many years I have been the subject of countless questions of
what anime should someone watch with little context.
Just recommend me some anime they say!
And I’ll list off a few and then they’ll respond
“Oh, but I’ve already seen those!”
Which makes the conversation frustrating.
So the ways I like to recommend anime is to ask back:
Well, what shows or movies outside of anime do you enjoy?
Because then I have a general idea of the kind of stories that you like and more likely have some
that might ACTUALLY interest you rather than me just making guesses at random about your tastes.
Now, since Game of Thones is so popular it’s as good a segue as any.
I'd like to think it is because of the few things that Game of Thrones offers that other shows do not.
Things like a long form narrative, deep characters,
and world building that goes far beyond what
is possible to even show in a single series.
Usually.
and there just so happen to be some animated shows made by our good friends over in the land of the rising
sun that have very similar qualities.
So ladies, gentlemen, and others, welcome
to Glass Reflection where today we are looking
at anime to watch if Game of Thrones is leaving
you feeling a bit disappointed.
[This is where the GoT Theme played for about 5 seconds until a Copyright Claim happend.]
[So now there is silence. Apologies. The rest of the video will play as normal!]
One of the greatest strengths, in this fan’s
opinion, of Game of Thrones is that as
a fantasy series it likes focus far more
on the characters and how they are forced
to interact and adapt to new situations, rather than
JUST the spectacle of the fantasy itself.
It also helps that our first suggestion,
it’s a bit more adult than what some people
might expect out of animation if they’ve
never gone beyond Disney before.
and, what better way to introduce them into anime then
to jump in the deep end with Berserk.
Berserk’s original anime – if you skip
the initial episode that has more to do with
the original material...is a fantasy war story showcasing
what happens when you tell a character that
they have a kind of divine right to rule,
that it’s their one purpose in life.
And then, not only do they happen to be really
good at leading people, but they also surround
themselves with competent advisors who help
them to achieve their goals.
Remind you of anyone?
While the anime adaptation of Berserk’s
Dark Fantasy epic really only covers what
could reasonably be considered the prologue of
the story as a whole, the way it showcases
Griffith’s rise to power, his aspirations
to be king, and his dance with madness is
not something that many other stories do with
the same level of growth and slow buildup
over time.
Plus, his relationships with the
other main characters, Guts and Caska, feel
a lot more grounded.
They become true friends over the course of
the show’s run, which makes the end of this
dark fantasy prologue all the more terrifying.
There’s also plenty of nudity, if that’s
something that improves a series for you.
But because anime is from Japan, there are
several takes on fantasy that are also grounded
in their own history.
One of these is a series called Moribito.
Moribito takes a type of feudal Japan and
throws its own kind of fantasy twist onto
it.
It largely follows a skilled warrior named
Balsa who is charged with keeping alive the
kingdom’s young prince, now under attack
from various sects within the country because
they believe the prince to carry a demon inside
of him. One that will bring ruin to the kingdom.
But because this is a real fantasy, the demon
inside the prince is not just a superstition.
There's actually a legit spirit living inside of him,
but what effects this spirit will have on
both the prince and the kingdom is less clear.
Moribito’s strengths are twofold.
First, the relationship between Balsa and
prince Chagum is second-to-none in this category,
because there are very few characters
like them in the first place.
Balsa is a very strong-willed warrior who
has the knowledge and the skills to outwit
and defend against the realm’s strongest
assassins, while Chagum is a character that
needs a fair amount of growth, starting off
because he is a bit of a spoiled brat at the beginning.
But he fleshes out into a wonderful young ruler.
Their chemistry is what drives the show forward
and what keeps us engaged for its entire 26-episode
run.
It also helps that the animation in the fight
scenes is damn good-looking, but that’s
not what we are focusing on necessarily.
So let’s move on.
As far as looking at characters and how they can influence and make a great story on their own
the last series that I want to touch on is the Saga of Tanya the Evil.
While you wouldn’t describe this series
as an ensemble of many strong characters,
this is a series that’s short and sweet,
about a character who is only one of those
two things.
While the explanation of Tanya’s backstory
is a bit “out there” as a concept, the
actual presentation of her as a commander
in this fantastical war is played brilliantly.
Tanya is the epitome of a character that is
almost too skilled for her own good, which
makes her arrogant and vindictive, while also
very vulnerable in the situations where she
accidently lands herself in over her head.
While many times she comes off as a master
tactician, she is also shown to fail when
it makes sense too.
She never wins because the plot demands it,
nor does she fail because of deus ex machina
junk at the final  moment.
It makes her feel far more real as a character
because she is not perfect, just very skilled.
So while her morals and actions are far from
justifiable or reputable, you still find yourself
rooting for this tiny psychopathic maniac
all the same.
Now, let’s move away from characters specifically
for a moment.
Not that they don’t have a role to play
in the upcoming shows I’m about to mention,
but I wanted to talk about the worlds themselves a bit more.
One of my favourite things about the fantasy genre itself, is when
I am given the feeling that these worlds are
distinctly different from our own – even
if they take place in the modern day, just
a slightly more fantastical version of it.
And since we are relating most of these in
some way to Game of Thrones, what would be
even better than having an epic story about
7 kingdoms?
Why not 12 Kingdoms?
The Twelve Kingdoms was originally a novel
series by Fuyumi Ono and those novels share
a lot of similarities with George RR Martin’s
fantasy epic.
Both contain massive worlds in scope that
didn't necessarily follow the story of one
specific hero through their journey to save
a kingdom or the world.
Instead, both have a several different character
perspectives that all just happen to occur
in the same universe.
Though in the case of Twelve Kingdoms, they are
not all happening concurrently and instead
the perspectives are divided by the actual
volumes.
Twelve Kingdoms starts out similarly to other
fantasy anime of the time, like Escaflowne.
A young Japanese school girl is whisked away
into a fantasy world by a powerful spirit-like
entity who claims that she is his queen.
She then has to evolve through her experiences
from this timid girl into a queen worthy of
the kingdom she represents.
But the reason I placed Twelve Kingdoms into
the world building category and not the characters
category is because the story of this girl
Youko is not the only one.
The narrative as a whole showcases multiple
protagonists and multiple travelers from other
worlds, all spanning generations of time.
This is a world that is portrayed as very
expansive to the point where much of the large
Twelve Kingdoms hasn’t even been touched.
Though while the light novel series is still
ongoing, it's a disappointing comparison to Game
of Thrones as it also that it’s been a while
since we've gotten the last entry,
of it but at least the anime
doesn’t decide to go off and finish the
story on its own to the disappointment of all.
Another way to make your world expansive
is to just have so gosh darn many side stories
and entries into the franchise that it’s
hard to sometimes keep track of them all.
Welcome to the world of Fate.
Starting as a visual novel in the early 2000’s
and getting its first anime adaptation back
in 2006, the Fate series is one that has expanded
to a massive scale, with multiple different
offshoots and alternative universes.
While I wouldn’t say that all of these entries
are worth your time or even good, I would
be remiss if I did not bring up the franchise
itself.
And if you are coming into this franchise
from Thrones, then the best place to start
would be with Fate/Zero.
Written by Gen Urobuchi and endorsed by the
franchise author Natsu himself, Zero is a
prequel story to the original visual novel.
It is arguably one of the best written and,
in the case of the anime, best produced adaptations
in the whole franchise.
It’s a battle royale series where mages
of various skill levels summon heroic spirits
from legends past to do battle for a mystical
wish-granting McGuffin: “The Holy Grail”.
While Zero itself keeps much of the war and
consequences of it within the series itself,
it’s a perfect introduction for the Fate
series as a whole that expands far beyond
the confines of this one series…into other
anime, a mobile game, light novels, a mobile
game, action-oriented battle games, and a
mobile game.
NO, I DON'T HAVE A.... PROBLEM....
If you like Thrones, then Attack on Titan while maybe being an obvious choice,
is definitely a series you should not sleep on.
It’s an incredibly gripping series about
a fantasy society that has walled itself off
from the rest of the world, in fear of the
massive titans that live outside.
The titans who threaten to brutally murder and
eat everyone alive.
It’s a story that places many seeds in the
beginning, which slowly grow over time as
our group of young warriors are forced to
train and grow while their society slowly
retracts inward as the Titans breach the walls. The very walls that keep humanity safe.
But it’s not as simple of a story as the
good humans vs the bad titans, and the actual
conflicts stretch far beyond that with much
more serious consequences, not only for the
world but for the relationships between all
of our characters.
We get to watch them venture out beyond the
walls to find answers, while rich nobles sit
pretty at the core of their society without
the worry or care that the rest of the citizens
have to face.
But unlike Thrones, Titan is not a series
that hypes everything up for over 7 seasons,
only to give you an anticlimactic showdown
at the end.
at least I hope so because the series is still technically ongoing, but it's been doing a very good job
up until now.
But really, the main similarity between these
two fantasy shows is that they both present
to us a semi-realistic world where the actions
of humanity define the whole narrative; where
not all of the characters are virtuous, heroic,
or stereotypically “good”; and what happens
when those kind of people are thrown together
into situations that brings out the worst
in them.
And like Moribito the action can keep you
engaged even if the rest fails to keep you
interested.
Lastly, if you want to watch an anime that
exceeds the definition of epic storytelling,
one that consists of a massive ensemble of
characters all with different compelling motivations
and deep stories, wrapped up in a narrative
so expansive that it’s also one of the most
expensive anime out on shelves today for the
sheer amount of rich content that it contains,
then look no further than Legend of the Galactic
Heroes.
One of the major things missing from the majority
of the shows that I’ve talked about today
is political drama, one of Thrones’s bread
and butter themes.
And no anime – hell, very few pieces of
entertainment – handle that better than
Legend of the Galactic Heroes.
It is a series that extends out through 110
25-minute episodes and several films.
But please, I beg of you, do not let the show’s
length scare you off – especially considering
that, when you actually do the math, LotGH
clocks in at only 46 hours, compared to Game
of Thrones at 70-plus by the end of it.
So really it's not all that long.
And it uses that time extremely well to showcase
this space opera that takes a young noble
from poor beginnings to politically maneuvering
his way into overthrowing an entire dynasty.
Of course, the setting of this series is not
limited to one nation, the political intrigue
and infighting spans the entire length of
this space universe into one of the most fantastical
series that has ever been animated, and it took
them almost 10 years to do it.
I cannot stress enough how it’s basically
impossible to properly do this series justice
in a video like this.
LotGH is a tale that likes to look at everything
from every angle, every context, showing the
consequences and ramifications to every decision
as it pertains to lineage, military, politics
and religion.
Not only that, but it’s extremely hard to
believe that a series of this length and magnitude
was somehow able to retain its quality over
time.
However, though some miracle, it succeeds
in every way.
If you watch any anime that I have mentioned
today, this should be the one.
While it might not be the easiest to sink
your teeth into, it is by far the most robust
and the most epic of any I have listed.
It is not, however, the Game of Thrones of
anime.
Such a thing does not and will not exist.
Unless HBO decides to animate a true ending,
if Martin ever finishes one.
But what I have hopefully laid before you
today is a bunch of different options for
other stories, other grand tales full of rich
worlds and deep characters that will scratch
that itch left by Thrones’ epic narrative.
With luck at least one the anime I have showcased will piqued your interest.
I’ll be putting links in the description
for the shows that have legal streaming options
available for those who require them.
So thank you for watching this video, I hope
you enjoyed and a very special thank you to
my patrons, who not only support my work in
general, but who also allow me to do what
I do.
I love and appreciate you all.
Specifically though, as I like to do, I want
to give particular shout-outs to patrons Matthew
Robertson, Hector Montemayor, Siri Yamiko,
Ryefan Boneapart, Rune Jachobson, Joshua Garcia,
and Calhoonboy for being especially awesome.
You guys are great!
And until next time – ladies, gentlemen,
and others – watch more anime…and stay
frosty.
