Grancrest Senki

2018-Jun-23, Saturday 13:43
dorchadas: (Enter the Samurai)
[personal profile] dorchadas
I've been watching a lot of anime lately. I finished Gamers! a few days ago--it was...okay--and started watching another one called Record of Grancrest War. The name's similarly to Record of Lodoss War (both of them use 戦記 senki, "war history") drew me in, and later I learned that the backgrounds for both Lodoss and Grancrest were done by Mizuno Ryō and both were based on tabletop RPGs. Lodoss was based on D&D, or rather Sword World, which is D&D as modified by people who can only find d6s in shops and who prefer MP to spell slots, and Grancrest has its own tabletop RPG. There's even a fan-translation of the first book.

The background reminds me a lot of D&D's Birthright setting. In Grancrest, there was a magical disaster in the past and some people managed to gain power from it and set themselves up as rulers known as "Lords" (君主 kunshu, "ruler, monarch, lord") Defeating other Lords makes a Lord more powerful, increasing the abilities of their crest (聖印 seiin, "holy seal, holy mark") and allows them to hold back the manifestations of chaos caused by the aforementioned magical disaster. So the story has a lot of politicking, battles between Lords, and seems like it's trying for more blood-and-mud backstabbing intrigue than everyone teaming up to fight the big bad. At least, so far. I'm only six episodes in.

That said, the pacing is very odd. At this point, the Lord protagonist has gained and lost a title, fought several battles, and already participated in a war between vampires and werewolves, which showed up suddenly in episode 5 with no previous hints that they existed. Apparently episode 5 is the entirety of the second light novel, so no wonder it seemed to fly by. Episode 6 is a romance subplot between characters introduced two episodes prior. And I actually think Birthright is a more interesting take on the concept, though maybe that's because I've read the Birthright corebook and only seen a quarter of the anime.

Also, it uses modern anime character designs, which is to say that the men have late-Renaissance clothing and armor and the women have combat thigh-highs and battle bikinis. Emoji crossed arms


Grancrest Senki Theo character designGrancrest Senki Siluca character design
Left: Theo Cornaro, Right: Siluca Meletes

In the first episode, Siluca talks about how embarrassing the outfit is, and how she's only wearing it because the Lord known as the Lustful Earl, who only makes contracts with female mages under the age of 25, requested it as part of the contract. Of course, later she says she's wearing it because it grants her freedom of movement, and then she just keeps wearing it throughout the show. Her true contract is with merchandisers.


I think if it didn't remind me of Birthright, and if it wasn't by Mizuno, there's no way I'd keep watching, but for now it's mindless fantasy fun. It does make me want to track down the first light novel, both to see what the world is like and for additional Japanese practice. I could always use more of that.