Quanzhi Gaoshou Specials

The King's Avatar (2018)

全职高手特别篇

Action
8.23 episodesFinished Airing

Studio: Colored Pencil Animation

Synopsis

The All-Star Tournament is a three-day event that allows e-sports participants from various professional clubs to display their skills, while also giving casual Glory players the chance to interact with pros in the flesh. Retired top-tier Glory player Ye Xiu agrees to watch the tournament together with Tang Rou and Chen Guo after the latter manages to get ahold of three tickets. It is a strange sensation for Ye Xiu, as unlike previous occasions, this time he attends the tournament as a spectator, not a participant. However, despite his attempts to keep a low profile, events in the All-Star Tournament may force the former Glory legend back into the limelight. [Written by MAL Rewrite]

Characters & Voice Actors

Ye, Xiu

Ye, Xiu

Main

VA: Zhang, Jie

Chen, Guo

Chen, Guo

Supporting

VA: Ji, Guanlin

Du, Ming

Du, Ming

Supporting

VA: Cao, Xupeng

Fang, Rui

Fang, Rui

Supporting

VA: Zhao, Lu

Gao, Yingjie

Gao, Yingjie

Supporting

VA: Shao, Tong

Han, Wenqing

Han, Wenqing

Supporting

VA: Song, Ming

Huang, Shaotian

Huang, Shaotian

Supporting

VA: Ye, Qing

Li, Xuan

Li, Xuan

Supporting

VA: Ji, Aojie

Lin, Jingyan

Lin, Jingyan

Supporting

VA: Guo, Haoran

Liu, Fei

Liu, Fei

Supporting

VA: Qian, Chen

Liu, Hao

Liu, Hao

Supporting

VA: Zhao, Yi

Qiao, Yifan

Qiao, Yifan

Supporting

VA: Su, Shangqing

Reviews

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Story: 8 Finally a good anime about gaming which is not "Transported to a gaming world. If you die in the game you die in real life" based because there are way to many of these. It is a pretty original story about a professional gamer which were forced to retire and now wants to make a comeback. This OVA features a tournament between rookies and pros, and there are a few cool fights. Art: 6 The art is okey. Nothing outstanding, nothing really bad either. The art in season 1 was a bit better than the art in this one, but it doesn't really affect the OVAstoo much. Sound: 7 The OP is ok, the ED is pretty good and the OST is ok. Nice sound effects. Character: 8 Likeable characters, except one very talkative character which I find pretty annoying. The MC is pretty bad ass and some might find it pretty funny how MC's boss is getting starstrucked all the time. Enjoyment: 8 I really like this series, it is a pretty original anime which doesn't only focus on the game, but also the players. Overall: 8 I think you'll definitely like this if you're into gaming or sports animes, because this is kind of a mix between those two. Even if you don't, I still recommend it because it is pretty original and you won't find something just like this out there.

Recommended
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The first season has had growing pains and, fortunately, the lessons learned have been incorporated. The first episode of the ONA is a confident, competent stride with all-around better animation and direction. It now uses creative ways and shot angles to help express the emotions of a moment and that presents one of the biggest leaps of the franchise coming from Season 1’s piss-poor direction and a tendency to telegraph everything to the viewer, sometimes in the most obnoxious slapstick way possible, reinforced by the janky animation of that season. Here, however, the motions are more fluid and subdued. And it’s a much better productas it gives its important scenes weight, power, and reverence. Although it seems like they blew almost their entire budget on episode one and episode three, preferring to can episode two to a fate of having less-fluid animation and leaning on still frames slightly being moved to give the illusion of action. An understandable compromise, but it's worth a mention nonetheless because it could symptomatic of technical inconsistency, especially if this was a longer series. Set in a LAN tournament, the All-Star, the ONA has done a pretty competent job at evoking the atmosphere of a LAN. It has maintained a higher standard of storytelling, touching on the themes of the shifting of generations and the passing of the torch, as the new bloods challenge the old guards of the game. The old has to give way to the new, as they say; and yet the old guard also still have so much left to impart. A further exploration of this dynamic, this nebulous era of the old and the new coexisting before one moves on and the other takes over, would hopefully be the direction the series takes as it moves forward. Fittingly for the theme, the main character has been sidelined to a mentor and spectator role in this story and he belongs there, in the mentor seat. As per my thesis way back in season one, if you’re going to make your main character a perfect/complete/faultless character instead of a still-flawed person trying to figure out what went wrong and how he can be a better player, then make him be the enabler of character growth in the people around him, his future teammates especially. Of course, the main goal would still be to setup his return to the competitive scene, but it’s certainly better that he’s never the primary focus even then. Rather, his return is and should be treated more as a celebration of the hearts he touched in all the years he played GLORY. The main drawback of the ONA is its spectacle. Ostensibly, it is a setup of both his return to the competitive scene and the participating teams that will oppose him but the limited runtime means that it is going to be primarily a spectacle. And, for a spectacle, it fails to be truly spectacular because of the way it conducts its fight scenes. The “dynamic” still frames aside, it still refuses to use wide angle shots to properly convey the entirety of a fight. As I’ve said before, a fight is a synthesis: thesis and anti-thesis, action and reaction. Here, there’s still the tendency to have action occur in one frame, showing only one character, then the reaction in the next frame, showing the target. Refusing to show both action and reaction in one frame rids the viewer of a frame of reference to ground the action which ends up limiting the impact of a fight. We’re merely following pretty colors flying around, at times even the DBZ-style of two thick colored lines colliding, instead of truly appreciating the choreography and flow of the fight. It has to resort to the same old dust eruption and flashy lights that just obscures and makes the scene messier in order to illustrate the impact of the attacks which is a piss-poor substitute to actually seeing the entire sequence of one person starting his attack and then hitting his target and seeing the target react to that, all in one frame. At least Episode 3 is doing better in that regard and there’s cause to hope for a much much better season 2. Have a happy MDL Changsha. TNC! TNC! TNC!

Mixed Feelings