DATE A LIVE III
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
12
RELEASE
March 29, 2019
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
The third season of Date A Live.
Itsuka Shidou's life has been a whirlwind as of late. Or more precisely, a spatial quake. Several of them, in fact. Powerful "Spirits" from other dimensions that take the form of girls are unintentionally causing these spatial quakes in his reality. And Shidou is the only one who can stop them with his unique ability: kissing them! By having the girls kiss and fall deeply in love with him, their devastating quake powers are sealed. The alternative to romancing them is to have a more militant and technological organization called the AST (Anti-Spirit Team) destroy the Spirits, something Shidou is vehemently against.
So far in the story, six Spirits have fallen for Shidou (as well as a few others). The girls compete with one another and vie for his affection, leaving him no end of headaches and misadventures. But a new challenger approaches.
(Source: Tokyo Otaku Mode)
CAST
Tooka Yatogami
Marina Inoue
Origami Tobiichi
Misuzu Togashi
Kotori Itsuka
Ayana Taketatsu
Shidou Itsuka
Nobunaga Shimazaki
Natsumi
Ayumi Mano
Kurumi Tokisaki
Asami Sanada
Yoshino
Iori Nomizu
Miku Izayoi
Minori Chihara
Yuzuru Yamai
Sarah Emi Bridcutt
Kaguya Yamai
Maaya Uchida
Reine Murasame
Aya Endou
Ellen Mira Mathers
Shizuka Itou
Kyouhei Kannazuki
Takehito Koyasu
Mii Fujibakama
Midori Tsukimiya
Ryouko Kusakabe
Ao Takahashi
Isaac Ray Peram Westcott
Ryoutarou Okiayu
Tamae Okamine
Kaori Sadohara
Ai Yamabuki
Risako Murai
Karen Nora Mathers
Nozomi Nishida
Mai Hazakura
Kayoko Tsumita
Hiroto Tonomachi
Anri Katsu
Elliot Baldwin Woodman
Jouji Nakata
Rinne Sonogami
Kana Hanazawa
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO DATE A LIVE III
REVIEWS
Aquaria
85/100A mix of romcom, drama, and... a bit of fanservice in the end.Continue on AniListRight off the bat from where we ended, it started pretty nicely with the firs four episodes being Natsumi's arc. It had a great dive down to her storyline and how she felt whenever she gets judged for her appearance. Gotta say, what we have was a generic anime with complete mindboggling and sad realization in the middle part, a funny yet hectic moment in the first, and complete fanservice in the end. For the record, try not to get caught while watching the last episode if you don't want some ahem judgmental eyes, if you know what I mean. Another thing to add about this great of an anime sequel is that, you may see your favorite waifus vying for the protagonist's attention. This anime is all about chad protagonist, but in the end, it became chad girls trying to make him swoon. If you ever want to see what the new spirits look like, then look no further for this is a perfect anime. If you want lolis, you got it. You want big onee-sans, you got it as well. If you want a wholesome waifu that you know you will never ever get, then watch this. This is the show that makes me think "Oh man, I think I'm smiling all over again and can't stop doing it." Note: Spoilers may spoil you. If you do not want that, then ask Kurumi to use Yod Bet to make you travel to the past that would prevent you from reading this in the first place.
For anyone looking for the synopsis:
Episodes 1 to 5: Main Protagonist is dealing with the 7th spirit codenamed "Witch" that tends to be attractive when turned into an adult version, and much more like a Yoshino when in her regular form. The girl has disillusioned self-worth, loathing herself to the point of destroying anyone's life if someone saw her original form.Episodes 6 to 11: Shido is dealing with the past of 5 years ago, the time where Origami fell into the hands of DEM and became a spirit codenamed: "Angel" as her normal codename, and "Devil" for her inverse form. This is the moment where things may sound complicated due to the fact that we're dealing about time and space continuum and how things may change if the history was rewritten back in the future.
Episode 12: Wholesome, hectic, yet fanservice. Yes, that's all I have to say to this episode. Mainly because that they're trying to swoon him over, to the point of going such extent as putting something questionable into his drink, trying to tempt him and make him think of "innocent" actions, and basically giving us a wholesome moment of him and Tohka in the end.
Overall, I say that this is one anime that I would probably want to continue. Can't say that I'm not highly expecting the same with a bit more wholesome moments with the spirits. With this in mind, I may or may not have to have a great sense of taste.
Ciaora39
41/100What seemed like a decent comeback at first, quickly turned sour halfway through.Continue on AniListIt's been a while. Five years. It sure baffles me that there are people who wanted more of Date A Live. After the disaster that was the 2nd season, I thought that people would reject it similarly to Infinite Stratos' 2nd season that turned out so bad they only released two OVAs and nothing else afterward. Now we get the 3rd installment from none other than J.C. Staff. After I finished watching this, it was evident that they weren't precisely giving this season to their A-team, if you get my drift.
Date A Live was the first anime I reviewed that was currently airing at the time. Looking back on it, as much as I did like certain aspects of the show, I could not remember a thing about what the plot was or who the characters were outside of their beautiful designs. Tsunako's awesome character designs can save a character's worth even with the generic development that goes with them. Granted, there were genuinely funny moments sprinkled here and there that I look fondly back. But other than that, Date A Live Season 1 was mostly too generic for me to give it any more cred. Once Season 2 came along, I was so flabbergasted by how the quality dropped significantly on almost every aspect that I didn't care enough to review it. That's how bad it was. Now, does Season 3 elevate the quality just a little?
The answer is: Yes, but very very minimally by a decimal point.
The animation is still not as flashy or colorful as Season 1's, which I still consider being that season's most definite highlight. It is a step above 2's because the colors aren't as muted on the character designs. But I noticed a lot of character movements that feel stiff, many instances of using still images, and action scenes not being that interesting to look at. I mentioned before how J.C. Staff weren't giving this to their A-team, and it is clear that they were not showing off their animation prowess compared to their other more significant projects. It's sad because I am a fan of Tsunako's artwork, and to see her creation not being given a big enough budget to see her art in motion is saddening.
There are two main story plot points in the 1st and 2nd half of the season; three if you count the 12th episode, but we'll get to that later. One involves a "witch" named Natsumi that Shido has to smitten for her not to turn evil. The main problem with this story is the character of Natsumi herself. She is not particularly likable, and we are supposed to feel some empathy towards her torment because of how she sees herself in her true form. This true form of hers does not make her sympathetic for all the evil deeds she's done and comes off utterly selfish to the point where I could not care enough for whatever would happen to her. The episode that involved the other girls turning into little children's version of themselves was entertaining in its own dumb, superficial way. But as a whole, it was not the best way to start the season with.
In the plot involving the quiet, stoic, white-haired angel Origami, this one was at least better than the previous story. However, I was mostly bored and uninterested in how they made Origami grow as a character instead of being annoyed. My problem with the cast in Date A Live has been: I like their archetypes but not their characters. What I mean is, I love their personalities and how they clash with one another in hilarious circumstances but not necessarily their character arcs that get involved in the main story because the story itself is so drab and barebones. With Origami's plot, it was interesting to see her with long hair and a more expressive personality later on in the season. Nevertheless, nothing about her is interesting due to the nature of the generic writing prevalent throughout the season.
Now we have got to talk about the dreaded 12th episode. To sum it up briefly, they wrote an entire episode to adapt the volume as a whole. The result is a hilarious, rushed episode of anything I have ever seen. It was like 1/3rd of the episode was adapting a few chapters of the volume and then quickly switching to a completely different story in the next 1/3rd of the episode. It almost felt like an OVA episode that they didn't even bother to put out separately. They just put it as the last episode to fill in that 12-episode gap in broadcasting to milk in more TV viewers because they had no faith that this would sell as an OVA.
This is the worst season, but it's a toss-up between this and the 2nd season for me. In plot, it is worse in how it is structured, but from a technical perspective, it wasn't a complete disaster like the 2nd season was in some aspects. It is such a shame because I genuinely wanted Date A Live to at least be a solid harem anime that I would enjoy. However, it suffers from the same problems many ecchi/harem anime go through. They try to put a serious story to it: they do not put enough effort into making a cohesive story that engages to experience and instead focus on flashy action and ecchi fanservice. Which, again, I'm not against whatsoever. However, if you can't do both right, make an anime that does one thing great rather than one thing decent and another terribly.
Grade: D+
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SCORE
- (3.5/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inMarch 29, 2019
Main Studio J.C. Staff
Trending Level 1
Favorited by 1,517 Users
Hashtag #DATE_A_LIVE