theyoungdoyley: Ace of the Diamond/Daiya no Ace by Terajima Yuuji has amazing art. While dynami
theyoungdoyley: Ace of the Diamond/Daiya no Ace by Terajima Yuuji has amazing art. While dynamic, the artist doesn’t sacrifice clarity, and that’s part of what makes it an addictive, suspenseful read. The images above are some of the pages that stuck with me. The anime has its moments of fluidity too, but the comic really hits it out of the park (‘eeeyyy) If you end up picking up Daiya, I at least recommend watching the first 16 or so episodes since those early arcs are adapted particularly well. (You can watch the animated adaptation legally on Crunchyroll) Daiya interests me because it starts out like a standard, hot-blooded shounen sports series then ends up going in a much more grounded and ruthless direction. Sawamura is a shounen hero in an environment that destroys shounen heroes. Players get injured frequently and have to recover (and recovery isn’t easy), players make mistakes with long term consequences for themselves and the team, and no matter how hard they work some players never get to be regulars, etc… it’s refreshing. So yeah, if that interests you, I definitely recommend checking it out! -- source link
#i love#terajima