GINTAMA°
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
51
RELEASE
March 30, 2016
LENGTH
24 min
DESCRIPTION
Gintoki, Shinpachi, and Kagura return as the fun-loving but broke members of the Yorozuya team! Living in an alternate-reality Edo, where swords are prohibited and alien overlords have conquered Japan, they try to thrive on doing whatever work they can get their hands on. However, Shinpachi and Kagura still haven't been paid... Does Gin-chan really spend all that cash playing pachinko?
Meanwhile, when Gintoki drunkenly staggers home one night, an alien spaceship crashes nearby. A fatally injured crew member emerges from the ship and gives Gintoki a strange, clock-shaped device, warning him that it is incredibly powerful and must be safeguarded. Mistaking it for his alarm clock, Gintoki proceeds to smash the device the next morning and suddenly discovers that the world outside his apartment has come to a standstill. With Kagura and Shinpachi at his side, he sets off to get the device fixed; though, as usual, nothing is ever that simple for the Yorozuya team.
Filled with tongue-in-cheek humor and moments of heartfelt emotion, Gintama's fourth season finds Gintoki and his friends facing both their most hilarious misadventures and most dangerous crises yet.
(Source: MAL Rewrite)
CAST
Gintoki Sakata
Tomokazu Sugita
Kagura
Rie Kugimiya
Shinpachi Shimura
Daisuke Sakaguchi
Kotarou Katsura
Akira Ishida
Toushirou Hijikata
Kazuya Nakai
Sougo Okita
Kenichi Suzumura
Shinsuke Takasugi
Takehito Koyasu
Tsukuyo
Yuuko Kaida
Taizou Hasegawa
Fumihiko Tachiki
Kamui
Satoshi Hino
Nobume Imai
Aya Hirano
Isao Kondou
Susumu Chiba
Elizabeth
Tooru Furuya
Tatsuma Sakamoto
Shinichirou Miki
Sadaharu
Mikako Takahashi
Kyuubei Yagyuu
Fumiko Orikasa
Tama
Omi Minami
Ayame Sarutobi
Yuu Kobayashi
Utsuro
Kouichi Yamadera
Tae Shimura
Satsuki Yukino
Shigeshige Tokugawa
Yuuki Ono
Isaburo Sasaki
Toshiyuki Morikawa
Zenzou Hattori
Keiji Fujiwara
Mutsu
Akeno Watanabe
Sagaru Yamazaki
Tetsuharu Oota
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO GINTAMA°
REVIEWS
musicoruu
100/100260 episodes of build up perfectly executedContinue on AniListAll spoilers in this review are marked
In this review will mainly be focusing on the plot, so many preexisting things like the amazing OST, will sadly be glossed overGintama is a comedy.
I don't think this statement is very controversial, and most Gintama fans would agree on this. For its first 300 episodes, Gintama was an amazing comedy with some serious episodes peppered in to keep the show going. For the majority of Gintama, the biggest worry for Odd Jobs Yorozuya is paying rent. Gintama did have some great arcs; season 3 was a shock to many, with it being a jam-packed array of serious arcs. Serious arcs in such quick succession were different to the arcs of the past, that, while incredibly entertaining, had been 4 episodes at most. However, other than that, Gintama is undoubtedly a comedy.
This season is when this changes.
But not immediately, the first arc - the time stop arc- being some of the best comedy I've ever watched, letting the audience know that they can expect the Gintama standard, and perhaps even something better. The third episode is hilarious, developing Yamazaki further, the fourth episode has no development but it's incredibly funny, the fifth and sixth episode are a hilarious arc which gives insight into the backstory of the characters and the seventh is an amazing Hijikata-Gintoki episode
Do you notice the trend?
Every episode is comedy other anime could only dream of; if I had to describe everything we would be here for a very long time but you get the drift. This season keeps the Gintama standard of amazing comedy plus great world-building every episode.
This season is when we say goodbye to that.
260 episodes. 260 episodes of build-up, some direct, some small, but all building up to this, the day when Gintama flips the switch and becomes serious. I was excited when it was announced at the end of episode 299, but I was worried. Gintama's serious arcs were amazing, but everything was leading up to this, if it didn't work well then it would be a waste of such well-done build-up and world-building. Safe to say my doubts were proven wrong, each episode was incredibly entertaining, with enough twists to fill up a bakery. There are so many good things about the switch flip that I'll have to separate them.
__OPs__ In terms of symbolism, these OPs are on the smaller side, maybe making it less enjoyable for the OP enthusiast. However, in terms of hyping the viewer for the episode, they are flawless. The only word I can use to describe what the OPs made me feel is euphoria. For the hype junkie, these OPs are up there with the greats
The guitars at the beginning of this OP make me jump with joy
This OP starts of relaxed but an alternate version made after the switch turns it pure hype for what's to come__Arc 1__ Even disclosing the name of this arc is spoilers so gloss over this and arc 2 if you haven't seen the show. Now that only the people who have seen this are here, I don't need to explain anything, do I? It's self-explanatory, we both know how good this arc, we both know that episode 305 is an emotional masterpiece, we both know the rest of the arc is packed to the brim with content and we both know that feeling of surprise, despair and bittersweet beauty in the abrupt end to the arc. Most of all, we both know nothing was the same after this. The shogun's death most likely hit all of us very hard, he was known as the mark of quality on an episode. If you saw the shogun in an episode you would smile, and get ready for the hilarious antics that would ensue, which makes it fitting that his death represents the death of the old Gintama...
__Arc 2__ The arc starts off incredibly bleak, following the death of the shogun, we have to see the aftermath. Things look hopeless, with the Shinsengumi backed into a corner, and we have no idea who could survive, we now know nobody except the main 3 were no longer off-limits, you really thought Kondo could die. Everything on the island was great and the shock of seeing Shoyo was practically paralysing. The reveal of Isaboro is also surprising, very well foreshadowed as you notice different irregularities within his character. I don't really need to elaborate on this arc, while I prefer the first, the second is the same quality, and arguably better paced!
That said, Gintama isn't for everyone, the comedy is different to almost any other show, and some may not like the amount of comedy, I would highly recommend it, but know that some may not like it
Overall, this is some of the best anime you will ever see, in any show, it wouldn't work, but Gintama pulls off a tone shift which any other series could not pull off. Gintama season 4 starts off as an amazing comedy and ends with an epic, spanning through almost like 40-70 of the established cast in order to tell an amazing story. If you have not watched Gintama, or haven't gotten to this season yet, please change that. After this season, Gintama has cemented itself as my favourite of all time
EpicSponge101
90/100Edo, the Land of SamuraiContinue on AniListThis review will contain spoilers for season 4 and analyze the events within it, but nothing after. If you want a more general review covering Gintama’s writing, go read my season 1 review. This will just over the arcs as my last 2 reviews have, so thanks; have a good day.
Gintama season 4 is perhaps one of the most hyped up seasons in anime, and for good reason. It’s the mark of a pivotal change in Gintama’s story structure, as we begin to shift from comedy-filled episodic escapades to serious arcs cascading over the rest of the show. So much comes to a head and develops; it was hard to write about, honestly. Even the production value significantly improved along with the season. You’re 4 reviews in at this point, though, so there’s no point dicking around— I’ll just get right into it.
The Reaper Arc The Reaper Arc I had no prior expectations going into, and I would like to say I was pleasantly surprised. It had a neat moral baseline that fit right in with the core thematic motifs of the series; I loved every bit of it. Asaemon learns to protect what she wants to protect like a samurai, as opposed to following the rigidness of law. The idea of humans being the only ones able to redeem each other is a beautiful thought as well, and it ties nicely into the executioner gimmick. Our characters all reflected different ideas and were very poignant for the arc. The former Yaemon lived like a samurai, for his own values, and Asaemon’s arc had her learn to live like that. Meanwhile, the 18th Yaemon killed to protect the family name, but only sullied the ideals behind it. I feel like the development of characters and themes was well done, and the character design reflected that. The skull Asaemon had ended up serving as neat symbolism as she shed her reaper identity and lived by her own merits. She executed herself to be born anew, and that was the perfect ending.
The death of the 18th Yaemon was also nice in multiple ways. His character development in saving Asaemon was a bit drastic and sudden, sure, but I can accept the philosophical shift despite its jarringness. On the flip end of the scale, Yaemon’s death turned into the perfect introduction for Nobunobu as a character. It set him up to be super intimidating as a figure and was just generally shocking. Not to mention it set up his motivation and personal philosophy super well, with lines like “I’m going to cut the head off of this antiquated country.” On top of all this, it was somehow made even more impactful by immediately tying him to the Kiheitai.
Shogun Assassination This arc has many moving elements to cover, and god damn are they all interesting. I’ll be segmenting them to cover it, and this way it should be easy to skip around to the parts you care about if you would like.
Oniwanbanshu and The Shogun Who would have guessed Gintama would go from a goofy comedy Shounen to a political thriller? Well, hopefully everyone, because this has been building up for a long time coming. 300 episodes of forces moving in the background of the show come to a major head here, and damn is it beautiful. We immediately begin with an assassination attempt on the Shogun’s head, setting a precedent for this arc like we’ve never seen before. Of course, in this scene, the Shogun explains to his sister Shoyo that he wishes he could stay under the moon in moments like this forever. Of course, this sets up a nice emotional impact for later, and the final scene which I’ll get to. As for the beginning of the Oniwabanshu, we get to develop Zenzo and Sachan’s philosophy a solid bit— which in my opinion was heavily needed for their characters. We learn of Sachan’s devout loyalty and sense of duty and then are given the red herring of Zenzo aiding the side he finds more fun, which is later subverted into the idea that Zenzo is betraying the Shogun to protect the country. This sets an interesting conflict for the viewer by framing a decently liked character as a villain, which I would like to say is excellently done. Sachan’s disappointment with him feels guttural, and the lighting and framing of the fake Shogun assassination scene make a shocking and imposing moment. Naturally, though, all of this is reversed by the twist that Zenzo actually assassinated his friend in the Shogun’s stead— which felt kind of bullshit at first, but it was decently executed, as the person’s sacrifice for the Shogun holds genuine weight. The Shogun as a character holds the philosophy of protecting his nation with his own life, which is of course reflected through the dialogue “The duty of the Oniwabanshu is not to protect the Shogun. It is to protect the Shogun's duty. And a Shogun's duty is to protect his people and his country even if he must risk his life to do it.”
I think this quote is well implemented into the Shogun’s backstory, and we get to see not only his connection with the Oniwabanshu, but his deep-rooted kindness and respect for others. The Shogun idolizes the life of the Samurai and their ideologies, so I think it makes perfect sense for him to come to the naive conclusion of disbanding the Shogunate. He does not feel fit as a ruler for such people, and he realizes the only people worthy are the people themselves. This also generally creates a good twist as we see him tell this directly to the Tendoshu and Nobunobu in the darkest hour of the show, which is honestly beautiful. It was the perfect setting; it made it hold great levity.
If we backtrack back to Zenzo for a second, his willingness to sacrifice himself for the Shogun accentuates their relationship and reliever for each other. He will sully his name to save his dearest friend; I think that was a nice stroke of development for Zenzo. It shows that a ninja and a samurai don’t have to be so different after all, as they can both protect what they value. The entire Oniwanbanshu faction going to war with the Kiheitai also gives some life and meaning to their faction as a whole. My only complaint is that it kind of came out of nowhere, and I wish we had at least been introduced to the village of ninja properly beforehand. Usually, Gintama has the sense to subtly implement these things through one-off comedy episodes.
Finally, I think the Shogun’s internal strife of having to run away instead of fighting directly for his nation is awesome. He wants to protect as many people as possible, but jeopardizing his own life would make all of that sacrifice pointless. He does what he can and even demonstrates his kunai technique, eventually, of course— but in the end, he has to run away from even Edo itself. He has to mature and run away to ever have a chance of facing anything in the first place, which I think is awesome. Then, unfortunately, we enter the final scenes of this arc. The Shogun, or now Shigeshige, is assassinated. The way it happens is near poetic, and it perfectly concludes his characters and adds nuance to the themes of the arc. We see him abandon his heavy guard in favor of making connections with people as Shigeshige, as a fellow samurai, as opposed to “The Shogun”. It’s a picturesque notion that perfectly falls in line with his character, but alas it’s fatally naive. Gintama pulls back on its ideal of the samurai and kills him— with no silver lining in the concept. It’s a tragic end to a hero; it gets the message that ideals don’t win a war alone across. It went far darker than I expected it to, and I appreciate it. Most similar Shounen would end up hoisting the themes of the story over the realism of the arc, but Gintama lets the idea of the correct ideals not always winning in the end flow. Really cool shit.
Gintoki’s Past and Takasugi Shogun Assassination is truly an arc of build-ups, for perhaps the most tantalizing mystery in the entire series has been Gintoki’s past. It’s been parodied and joked about constantly through the course of the show, and we even got a little tease in Courtesan of a Nation— but the truth comes out here; it’s pretty great. The mystery was incredibly well-executed, and the answer was satisfying. I suppose I proceed myself, though. I think it would probably be important to note Takasugi's presence in the arc in general first. Him and Kamui teaming up with Nobunobu was imposing as hell, and it set the stage for the most chaotic political storm possible. His and Gintoki’s confrontation was slowly built up in the arc, and Gintoki’s charge down the mountain to face him was incredibly hype. As was the battle in general, as they really let the animation budget go for this arc. The direction of the fight is generally superb; its structure, too. It’s tied in with bits of Takasugi, Gintoki, and Katsura’s past with Shoyo, which gives us a greater understanding of the characters fighting. Then the build-up to the twist of Gintoki executing Shoyo himself was super well-executed, making us simultaneously be shocked and understand Takasugi’s hate of Gintoki. Takasugi despising the government and wanting to destroy the government makes sense because of what they did, and Takasugi hating Gintoki while not understanding his actions is perfect— and of course for not rebelling against the Bakufu. Gintoki killed Shoyo to protect Shoyo’s will and ideals, on top of saving his comrades. He tried to protect Shoyo and Takasugi but ended up sending Takasugi down the wrong path, and as we learn in Farewell Shinsengumi— killing Shoyo was for naught. How ironic.
Anyway, Takasugi develops in this fight, as he understands Gintoki’s intentions more. He understands why he saved them instead of Shoyo, and his conviction only goes stronger for it. They’re both samurai with things they value and need to protect, and these ideals are highlighted by their convictions only being strengthened here. Where most Shounen would redeem a villain and have him flip perspective, they simply have Takasugi understand but disagree here— which I think is pretty fucking epic. Gintoki continues living in the present for his ideals, and Takasugi continues fighting and grieving over the past. There was a lot of nuance for a segment that only stretched over 2 or so episodes.
Other Developments Hijikata, Kondo, and Okita all get solid amounts of development in this arc. We see them defend their ideals like true samurai, and just generally generate hype. The parting between the Odd Jobs and Kondo’s group on the bridge was pretty impactful, drawing on things like the Shinsengumi never requesting the Odd Jobs up until this point. On top of this, Matsudaira developed phenomenally in this arc by establishing his motivations. Sure, we knew he was assigned to protect the Shogun previously, but it fleshed out why and how much he respects him. He even respected him so much as a friend he let him meet with no guards, which tragically ended up being the Shogun’s death. That’s just depressing, honestly. Then, finally, I would like to note how imposing Nobunobu ended up being. He used the main villains built up for the entire show as his puppets, killed the fucking Shogun, and got the approval of the Tendoshu. What a villain. He feels slimy, childish, and despicable— he is one of the most hateable villains in anime for sure. I don’t want to proceed myself, though, so we’ll wait until Farewell Shinsengumi.
In conclusion, this was the single best Gintama arc up until this point. Some insane developments accompanied by the most hype political thriller I’ve seen since Code Geass, and god damn did everything pay off. Episode 305 isn’t considered the best episode in Gintama for something, and I’m sure it’s etched into the hearts of most who watch it. Super fucking cool.
Farewell Shinsengumi Directly following Shogun Assassination, I’ve hit another mega arc I’ll have to split into segments— so here we go.
The New Regime Farewell Shinsengumi begins with bombastic music, showing every rippling effect of the Shogun’s death— and this is perhaps my favorite start to an arc in fiction. There is an insurmountable amount of development for many characters in such a short amount of time. We see Zenzo grieve over having killed his friend and fought a war for naught, we see Katsura promise to change the nation in his deceased rival’s stead, we see Yorozuya hit their lows after failing to save someone for the first time, we see the Shinsengumi split up under Nobunobu’s iron fist— and the individual fragmentations of that. Kondo takes the role of a martyr to let his men live on, as Hijikata tries to accept this. Eventually, however, the Shinsengumi conclude that there is no point in living if they can’t protect their values and their chief— which falls into the motif of samurai. Gintoki also gets nice development on this stroke as he gives Hijikata advice on what to do, having made a mistake in a similar situation— referring to Shoyo. Otae learns how important Kondo was to her all of this time, calling back on old gags to turn them into serious emotional beats, mostly with the stalker stuff. Anyways, this brooding tone cascades over our main cast as Nobunobu takes over the shogunate, and damn is it impactful. In the scene where he antagonizes Otae and others with his newfound power it’s extra cathartic to see Gintoki deck him because of our hero’s recent loss. Everything about this is just incredibly well executed, and Isaburo even taking the piss on him was a nice touch. Of course, this isn’t all, for there’s more development in these first two episodes than most one-cour shows. We get to see Matsudaira hit his all time low, even contemplating assassinating Nobunobu to avenge his dear friend. This emphasizes Matsudaira’s relationship with Shigeshige better than anything until this point has. Finally, to cap off this section, we get to see the Shinsengumi and Joi Rebels abandon their previous grudges and statuses to join as samurai with common values. It had been a long time coming, and this really accentuates the idea of positions pitting pretty like-minded people against each other. The core idea differentiating them before the Shinsengumi disbanded was a lawful attempt to protect their values as opposed to a rebellious one, obviously.
Nobume and Isaburo Nobume and Isaburo were incredibly underdeveloped as characters before this arc, so I’m glad they got what they sorely needed; it was great. The backstory was well interwoven with the fights raging at the time; Isaburo’s fight against the Shinsengumi was hype and climactic for the long-time feud. I think the general direction and color palettes of the backstory scenes were done super well. The actual plot itself was well constructed mostly due to the story structure, like with the timing of the reveal of Nobume’s name being what Isaburo was going to name his daughter. The depiction was just neat in all fields, and it really helped us understand Isaburo as a character— as a father, and as a samurai. His suicidal, hopeless notions of wanting to end such an era of violence and made sense for his character and was unexpected. Nobume’s love for Isaburo being explained by his fatherly relationship with him, as well as her duty of guilt to kill him worked away my previous problems with her character expeditiously.
Directly after the entire backstory scenes they drew parallels between Kondo and Isaburo as leaders— which was to great effect. They were both samurai with their own things to protect in life, and Isaburo respected Kondo for that. Kondo’s advice had once helped him after all, even if it had backfired and he lost his wife and daughter anyways. It was a nice way to wrap up their relationship before Isaburo’s death; on that note, it was a great conclusion to his character. He knew he would never be able to change a thing about the world in the end, but he got to raise and love Nobume. He sacrificed himself for her in the end, which is the perfect conclusion for him. Then, the send-off the Shinsengumi, Mimawarigumi, and Nobume give off with the salute was really emotionally poignant. They saw their chief off; Nobume sent off her father. The cell phone being thrown over the edge was a nice touch too. Pretty impressive development for one arc, I would say— and yet again there were plenty of twists that made events worthwhile.
As a little bonus and afterthought for Thorny, I was surprised to see Tetsu get great development at the end of this arc. Even if they never got along, he wanted to impress his brother, and I think that was gratifying to see. I’m glad his character wasn’t entirely abandoned post-Thorny.
Utsuro In one of the most hype introductions I’ve ever seen, Utsuro enters the final quarter of the battle, tearing our protagonists to shreds. He eviscerates Gintoki with his ship, pummels Kagura, breaks Okita’s arm, and severely injures several people on the playing field— all while this menacing OST is blaring in the background. His presence is given weight for being one of the Tendoshu heads, and obviously just how powerful he’s shown to be. This is confounded upon when he’s revealed to be Shoyo, which not only sets up a solid mystery, but makes him all the more imposing and impactful. You can see the ripples of emotion this sends through Gintoki as he tries to process what he’s seeing— and it’s pretty fucking cool. The OST, the framing, the lighting, and the animation all make Utsuro seem next-level as a villain. He wipes the floor with some of the strongest people in the show up until this point, and is only another threat to stockpile on top of Nobunobu. This certainly promises to affect Gintoki’s character tons later, which I look forward to. My only potential issue is how cliche it is to bring back a dear friend who’s been taken over or is being controlled by something else entirely, so I really hope they take this in the correct direction. This section was shorter, but it was an important development, so I figured I’d cover it.
Final Thoughts To touch up on some things I missed talking about during the arc, I would like to start with Kondo. I think he and Katsura both developed phenomenally as they dropped the pretext of being a rebel or cop, and joined forces as samurai. We also got to see how much Kondo’s men truly love and respect him, attempting to save him and even abandoning themselves in such a dire situation. Hijikata’s depression upon Kondo’s death accentuated their dichotomy, and Gintoki incurring him to rage and fight also showed a lot. The scene was really cool, even if we got baited on Kondo’s death. Then, for the Shinsengumi’s actual conclusion, god damn was it beautiful. Otae and Kondo’s farewell used previous comedy to create emotional beats; it was to great success. The Shinsengumi left Edo, officially disbanding— though their ideals as samurai would still live on, which is what made them Shinsengumi in the first place. Odd Jobs taking over the protection of Edo in their stead was also superb in concept.
So, finally, Farewell Shinsengumi was perhaps the most emotional saga in Gintama so far. It has events which will be felt later into the story, and had conclusions that capped off characters well. I can see why this arc is praised so highly; damn, it was a good time.
Conclusion I know it seems a little brief to only cover 3 arcs, and only serious ones at that— but I genuinely don’t think any comedy arc in this season is worth noting. Some were really funny and some were duds, sure, but I don’t feel there’s anything I need to analyze that I haven’t covered a similar thing on before. I’d just like to say that some characters like Kyubei and Saitou got great development, and that’s really all. So sorry if you guys wanted to see something on Feigned Illness. It would really just be me saying how they took a cliche formula and subverted it for great comedy, which I’ve already talked about Gintama doing before. Anyways, this season was one of the best, and damn, it gets me hyped for more. Signing out, and always feel free to message me your thoughts— they’re very much appreciated.
AverageHomie
97/100The silver soul continues to shine brightlyContinue on AniListGintama° is home to one of the greatest stretch of epsiodes in the medium. The first ⅔ of the series is classic Gintama comedy. The Afro, barber and feigned illness arcs were extremely funny and so were the stand alone episodes this season while not consistently as funny as S2 they still managed to yet hit the spot and when they did you'd be bound to get a laugh or two.
__Shinigami__ The shinigami arc focuses on asaemon and explores Gintoki's past even further, the introduction of Nobu Nobu was done very well too. The visuals in this arc were the spot light of it looking consistently pretty throughout with new OSTs here and there.
Shogun assassination The final third of this series starts off with a shock and maintains this blood wrenching tension for two succesive arcs. Sougo and kamui have a short heated fight maintaining the hype and excitement of this arc. Many characters like Sachan and Zenzo get focus too and develop into more likable characters.
EP 305 "Sworn enemy" delivers the highly anticipated Gintoki vs Takasugi fight in a raw and exciting fashion with quick sword fighting and hand to hand combat choreography. Between this fight a numerous amount of rightly used flashbacks are placed that explain the entire story and recontextualize everything we had seen thus far.
Takasugi receives his much needed characterization that solidifies him and Gintoki as rivals like no other.
Shoyo was the world to them, when that world is killed in front of them, they are to choose either two paths one is revenge (takasugi) and the other is suppressing those emotions (Gintoki). It's these layers of themes that built upon this rivalry. After all its their own weakness because of which they possess a strong hatred towards the other.
The shogun assassination arcs ends in an extremely bleak point and the atmosphere only darkens in the next arc.
__Farewell shinsengumi__ The farewell shinsengumi arc as the name suggests focuses on the shinsengumi and their bonds with not only among themselves but as well as the Yorozuya. Kondo develops and so does his relationship with the rest of crew. An absolutely striking plot twist that contradicts one of the major themes of Gintama, escaping your past and your past keeps on haunting you.
Isaburo's backstory made him a fantastic character and deepened his relationship with nobume. A rather important focus on them made this arc reach even higher emotional notes than the previous.
This arc ended on a rather bittersweet note with the shinsengumi saluting and all the characters interacting and sharing a sweet moment with each other.
Visuals and sound (8/10)
The serious arcs looked eye candy though the comedy ones felt rather static. There were a few weakly produced episodes but the majority overshadowed it, the FS arc was top tier in terms of production and some scenes were visually fantastic.
The voice actors are still fantastic, the openings and endings were solid too.
OP 15>OP 17>OP14>OP 16
ED 26>ED 25>RestTo conclude,
Gintama Season 4 was an excellent payoff to its wonderful build-up. Everything from here on marks the "end game" of the series.
Thanks for reading.
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SCORE
- (4.5/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inMarch 30, 2016
Main Studio Bandai Namco Pictures
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