PEACH BOY RIVERSIDE
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
12
RELEASE
September 16, 2021
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
Saltherine Aldarake, princess of the Kingdom of Aldarake, dreams of traveling the world—a dangerous dream in a land where monsters roam the countryside as they please, and humans live behind high, strong walls. But when a chance meeting with traveler Mikoto gives hope to her dream, he shatters it soon after, as he reveals himself to be none other than Momotaro, ruthless demon-slayer. Though horrified by the gore Momotaro leaves behind, Saltherine is convinced more than ever that she needs to learn about the world beyond her walls, and journeys out...following the steps of the mysterious, charismatic, terrifying boy she met that day...
(Source: Kodansha USA)
CAST
Saltherine Aldarake
Haruka Shiraishi
Mikoto Kibitsu
Nao Touyama
Frau
Mao Ichimichi
Carrot
Megumi Toda
Winnie Emex
Haruka Tomatsu
Hawthorn
Toshiki Masuda
Juselino
Yurika Kubo
Millia
Mayu Mineda
Inu
Jirou Saitou
Atra
Yuuko Suzuhana
Todoroki
Misato Murai
Sumeragi
Daisuke Hirakawa
Sett
Takehiro Hasu
Berett
Sally Amaki
Aomen oni
Toshiki Iwasawa
Hajin Zokuchou
Hiroshi Shirokuma
Mou oni
Kento Fujinuma
Ki oni
Mugihito
Aldarake Kokuo
Ikkyuu Juku
Jii oni
Kiyomitsu Mizuuchi
Elf Zokuchou
Masaki Terasoma
Kenness
Masumi Tazawa
Shounen
Haruka Nagamine
Bakery Tenin
Haruka Nagamine
Shounen
Masumi Tazawa
EPISODES
Dubbed
Not available on crunchyroll
RELATED TO PEACH BOY RIVERSIDE
REVIEWS
SunlitSonata
25/100A painfully generic schlocky fantasy that isn’t schlocky enough and aired out of order to no benefit.Continue on AniListTo call the anime adaptation of Peach Boy Riverside a mess would actually be an understatement. A “mess” is usually caused by accident, trying to do something well and then tripping for some reason or the other. No, the fate of this anime was sealed before an episode even aired.
The staff decided to take a fairly logical flow of events from the manga, and then shuffle them around, just so the final episode could end on some sort of action climax. This butchers the show right out of the gate. It makes you wonder why certain characters are even in certain places at certain times without properly communicating a sense of time. Occasionally Sally, one of the two protagonists, will have an outfit change, but other than that, it makes the timeline seem jumpy and difficult to really wrap your head around, especially for weekly viewers. If you’re a manga reader, this approach does very little, since you already know what happens in the story and can already say what goes where. Hell, the anime itself manages to both spoil the result of the final episode before it even happens and make the ending of another episode a huge ass pull because it brings in a character the audience hadn’t gotten to know yet. So, this is detrimental on both ends.
I’ve seen some comparisons made to Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya and Baccano before the series aired, in regard to airing episodes out of the intended order from their source, but both of those series better justify this particular decision. Haruhi was mostly a slice of life comedy, with only some plot gradually thrown through the background, so the lack of consequence in the majority of runtime fit the kind of show that it was, while letting individual episodes stand out on their own. Baccano meanwhile was an incredibly fast paced show; many events of importance were happening at once and one of the three plotlines was an action setpiece on a train that was constantly evolving.
Peach Boy Riverside doesn’t have the forethought of either series. It’s tied to a fairly strict continuity of events each episode, at a pace that can be incredibly slow at points, and there’s no distinct vibe that the out of orderness adds to spice up the viewing experience, beyond learning certain things earlier than they’ll actually come up. To any new watchers, there’s nothing to gain from the way the staff aired this anime, which I will judge as such since that’s how it was released.
Jee, I’ve talked so much about the out of order timeline and its detrimental effect on enjoying the show that I’ve barely talked about the show itself yet!
So, what is this story that the staff felt was so intriguing that it needed to be told out of order to try and invest a brand new audience? A painfully generic fantasy romp that makes Akame ga Kill seem inspired by comparison, even with its folktale origin.In a fantasy world that’s incredibly non-descript, half the show follows Sally, a princess with the magical power of getting hot and bothered. The other half follows Mikoto, a swordsman who seems dedicated to solving the systemic problems of the world by murdering nearly every oni he comes across, but not when one of them needs to be alive for plot reasons, or tag along with either protagonist for reasons that don’t add too much beyond more powers for the action scenes. The show likes to abuse the “pet the dog” trope for these characters, giving a determinably evil race just enough sympathy or a cute design for them to stick around, but not enough to really……understand them. It’s mostly a series of slow conversations underlying limp, weakly animated schlocky action.
Characters talk about various things, places get destroyed, but the show doesn’t do enough to get you invested in its world. It’s a very thrown together world, the kind that’s unfortunately very common in low rent fantasy stories. Every place is just a place to host plot. If each setting the characters visited had a distinct visual identity, perhaps it would better serve the out of order pacing of the anime by making it easy for viewers to remember what place was shown when, but alas. It’s not a plot to really expect much from, but at times it’s trying to say something about racism.
It’s not entirely lip service either despite not having much punch. How humans treat demihumans (or ogres) with disrespect versus how demihumans harshly react to the human characters is something that’s occasionally brought up as a drive across several episodes. This is at least pondered in Episode 7, and creates the distinct ideologies of the two protagonists.
Sally…is not a great female lead for this story. Beyond the in-poor-taste tentacle fanservice you see right from Episode 1, she’s mainly there to be incredibly ignorant of the world around her as a once sheltered princess and, again, get hot and bothered during the action scenes……………………..like once. If the first episode hooked you on the possibility of her going cuckoo for Coco Puffs in the action scenes, I hate to say it but this hardly ever happens again; one action scene later when she uses the power, she’s fairly measured. Crunchyroll at least wanted to market the series with the scene where Sally goes crazy with her special shonen power, but if you want more of that craziness, it’s missing in a show that’s already committed to being hardcore schlock.
Instead, she’s mostly just shown as painfully naïve. By the third episode, which takes place a bit later in the actual timeline, she’s deciding between the guy who wants to kill all the ogres, but whom she personally knows has her best interest in mind, and a total snake who claims to be wanting the races to co-exist. She’s one of the characters hurt most by the out of order pacing, participating in action but not driving a plot that’s above the audiences’ heads.
Mikoto is at least a little better; there’s actually an episode in the season that shows us their crybaby backstory which is…………fine, probably one of the few episodes where its timeline placement doesn’t really damage the cruddy pacing of the series. Sometimes his attitude is enjoyable. Otherwise though, he alternates between being nonchalantly morbid and IMUSTKILLALLTHEOGRES much like a certain other Shonen protagonist known for yelling. His voice actress is very sweet sounding, to the point where, in combination with the wiki considering him “non-bindery”, I assumed maybe this character was a non-binary protagonist, which could’ve been fairly progressive for anime. But nope. Quite the opposite, we get an incredibly uncomfortable gender panic scene in Episode 4, where Sally is shocked at him being flatchested and then lands on top of him as she realizes further. Another episode literally ends on a joke of someone else realizing the character is a femboy. GREAT.
The rest of the cast is pretty dull: a collection of tropes with little to really contribute. There’s witches, nuns, tiny priest looking ogre girls, a boring guy who only exists to be the straight man, and a series of ogre designs which serve more as action obstacles than anything else. With exception to Mikoto and one other, there isn’t much to really care about in the limited time the anime has; most of these relationships are shown out of order at any rate.
The best character in the show is easily Frau, one of the few for whom the racism lip service idea has some kind of fruit to bear. Frau has a distinct design as a bunny schoolgirl shaped like a friend, and their loyalty to Sally is at least charming and believable in a couple of the action scenes, despite the weird worldbuilding to justify their revival mechanics not really being. Still, they’re the most distinct character in a fairly bland and boring cast.Perhaps the best I can say visually is that there’s at least……………..some creative designs? Like the aforementioned Frau, or the giant walrus and chicken demon things from the first episode. There’s some variety in even the more generic ogre characters. The art style is passable, but you won’t find much in the way of fluid animation to come from it. Most action scenes compromise of several motion tweens moved in sequence, and the occasional big explosion. It doesn’t go nearly as ridiculously bloody as you might hope from a show like this; a Kouta Hirano anime this certainly isn’t. There’s no cost cutting CGI, which is good, until the final episode when there's a hideous CGI tree monster with half committed compositing. It keeps a consistent art style in place, but these scenes don’t do enough to stand out or flow well at any rate. Similar for the soundtrack; there’s a couple decent tunes drowned out by the dialogue, but nothing you’ll think of after this show ends. The ED though is one of the lamest I’ve ever seen visually in some time, with almost nothing going on but panning up on still shots of characters in various places; no unique personality of an animator shining through.
Peach Boy Riverside is mostly pretty trash, but not entirely from the base of it. I at least like the idea of having two protagonists with distinct ideologies regarding their world’s systemic conflict going on their separate journeys and occasionally crossing paths, even if that happens too frequently in conjunction with lackluster worldbuilding, action scenes being schlocky without being memorable and the out of order story the anime staff planned out not being very considered for narrative investment at all. You’re not gonna get much from here. If you really care about the story that much, just read the manga. But if you’re just a shonen or action fan, I’d say skip this self-inflicted mess. There’s much better options for you out there in both a building structure and bombast from action scenes.
Ionliosite2
30/100Peach Boy Riverside is a mess with a single saving graceContinue on AniListI only watched this anime after it finished airing to watch it in chronological order, so I won't touch that part which I definitely consider the most insane of this adaptation, as watching this in any order but the actual one will be beyond confusing. As for the series itself, I have to say this thing annoys me.
Sally, the main character, is a hypocrite. She wants peace between humans and oni and yet she kills oni without much of an issue but never does the same to humans. She's insufferable, her super cheery personality makes her very hard to watch when EVERYTHING ELSE AROUND HER shows why she shouldn't be cheery, she's completely blind to the issues around and just wants to stick her morals to everyone else. And speaking of those morals, she only has them because of what's basically a bet, so even her motivation for them is shallow.
All the other members of the main cast are much more bearable than her, but rather suffer from just being there with very little in terms of development or even personality. Onis are a mixed bag, because while some are more interesting like Todoroki and the vampire, most of the ones the series focus on are either insufferable (the nun) or change their personalities on a dime to make it impossible to know how are you even supposed to approach to them (Sumeragi).
Another thing that's a negative is how the series handles death. I don't want to enter much in spoiler territory, but let's just say they're all a huge anticlimax. EVERY SINGLE DEATH just happens, no build up, they just kill characters by the dozens with everyone just moving on shortly after, and if you don't move on, you're killed too. It makes sense with the nameless mooks, but when characters you had been building up for many chapters just die and are ignored, ESPECIALLY those that do without the main cast even knowing, just kills off any kind of importance for side characters since they can just die and no one will care.
Let's just say this simply: Mikoto carries the entire show. He's the only character we see having real development, has an actual backstory, has a set personality with clear goals that don't change and make perfect sense with his past, and he's a very conflicted person due to the clash between his personality and powers. Despite the cast list above listing him as part of the main cast, HE'S NOT, he spends many episodes without appearing and goes on his journey completely aside from Sally. And you know what? THOSE are the best part of the whole series, with his interesting dynamic with his dog and how he advances on his goal. I have no idea why the show isn't about him.
In short, Mikoto is the single good thing out of this show, he's great and should be the sole focus of the story, he's the only reason I'm not giving this show a lower score, and the episode focused only on him is the best in the whole series and I'm offended there aren't more of those. So, watch it if you can stand Sally, otherwise, Mikoto will be the only thing you'll enjoy.
Thank you for reading.
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SCORE
- (3/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inSeptember 16, 2021
Main Studio Asahi Production
Favorited by 490 Users
Hashtag #ピーチボーイ