I remember Land of the Lustrous. I didn't watch it, but it was kinda hot for a short time when it first came out.
Highly recommend!
Right now I'm rewatching Thunderbolt Fantasy, since I learned recently that the final Season dropped when I wasn't looking! I gotta catch back up on it so I can appreciate what these puppets have to offer. I honestly thought Season 3 might have been a cliffhanger ending we'd never see a continuation from, because work on the show was stopped right in the throes of COVID, and I was worried that either some vital members of the crew had gotten sick or that the quarantine forced a reevaluation by the people funding the show and pivoting to instead fund entertainment that could be worked on digitally. As awesome as the puppets are, the fact that the puppet crews need to work very closely together isn't great in a pandemic.
OH LORD I HOPE THE FINAL SEASON IS GREAT! I'VE BEEN WAITING SO LONG FOR IT AND I WANT A SPECTACULAR FINISH TO THE SHOW SO BAD! PLEASE DON'T DISAPPOINT ME!
Urobuchi basically kept it afloat financially as a passion project. I haven't finished the final season but you can definitely feel the crunch - originally they had planned to finish things off with 2 more seasons and 2 more movies, but had to settle for one partial season. Lots of fully kitted out puppets get introduced and die off in 3 episodes & a lot of major characters get "resolved" awfully quick. I still love the show but adjust your expectations when moving from the earlier seasons to the final one
I've not seen the anime, but I read the land of the lustrous manga. I thought it was pretty good, it gets real weird, probably in a good way, and would recommend it.
Anything that takes Buddhist cosmology and turns it into kino like wrath of Asura instantly finds a place in my heart. It also helps that the characterisation is so strong in land of the lustrous. I almost don't want to read it because I hate seeing the MC's hope and optimism slowly fade D;
Good work when it makes you care for the characters
At this point I've given up on lamenting the monotony of Power Fantasy Isekais, and now I'm just rolling with it.
I'll always give every show a shot, since even generic titled isekais sometimes throw out gems (I always liken it to everyone considering the Chronicles of Narnia as masterpieces but what if they were republished in the 21st century under some isekai title like "that time I was reincarnated in a fantasy world ruled by an evil white witch and given OP cheat powers by lion jesus). It's like blind taste testing some food so the presentation / marketing doesn't affect your judgement, and you give it a fair chance to make you feel. Stuff like Maou2077, Lvl1 Demon Lord to one room hero, Banished from the hero's party I lived a quiet life in the countryside, Chillin' in Another World with Level 2 Super Cheat Powers, SSS class suicide hunter e.t.c. where they end up delivering a lot more fun, entertainment, thought or orginality than you'd expect
But then you get seasons like this spring season where there's Bogus Skill Fruitmaster, I'm a Noble on the brink of ruin so may as well master magic, Solo Levelling, Guild Receptionist e.t.c. that are so similar it's hard for my brain to separate one group of plucky young heroes with OP cheat powers, an inner-circle of unquestioningly fawning friends + an inexplicably arrogant wider setting that looks down on their horrifically overpowered power for some reason. I'm not even sure if they're bad, it's just so... Indistinguishable. A bit like how there's the isekai of the middle aged shopper, the isekai of the greatest alchemist of all time, and the isekai of the noble on the brink of ruin so he invents magic. They're not bad, but they all follow the same formula of "bro gets isekai'd, uses OP cheat powers to turn fantasy world into suburban Japan" that they're dangerously close to becoming the same show.
At least the middle aged shopper one actually has the middle aged protagonist to distinguish the show from the others. The character really does act like an exhausted, tired of life middle-aged man. I was surprised when the protagonist gets with a receptionist lady, they have sex after clicking together, but it's clear from the start he has 0 interest in a relationship and she's expecting more. The guy uses her to orientate himself in this new city / world and then sets up his own business + makes new friends, including having sex with a cat girl (following Oglaf rules where the cat men are all animal-like and the cat women are just human women + cat ears & tails). The receptionist's VA actually sells you on how heartbroken they are when they discover another woman's hair on the man's clothes after he disappeared all night, and the difference between the receptionist's forlorn farewell and the protagonist's indifferent departure where he's all politely, but dispassionately "thanks for the help see ya" was a rare moment of drama that had me going "damn." Everything after that doesn't really capture that mood of the guy being a middle aged, burnt out dude just looking to relax in life, turning into a standard kind of fantasy shonen about justice, power, friendship e.t.c. and the receptionist doesn't feature ever again
Red Ranger becomes an adventurer - great isekai this season. Crossover between isekai standard fantasy tropes and freaking power rangers. The isekai fantasy stuff is played straight but the constant talks of friendship and random explosions don't get old for me
From bureaucrat to villainess - dad's been reincarted - probably going to be the best isekai this year. Great writing, great characters, and is a passion project of the creators
I finished watching the first season of Failure Frame: I Became the Strongest and Annihilated Everything With Low-Level Spells.
Yooooo I saw this one. "Even Given the Worthless “Appraiser” Class, I’m Actually the Strongest" that came out this season is basically just 1 to 1 the same as Failure Frame
It is somewhat disappointing however that every antagonist is an extremely shallow, 1-dimensional character who monologue constantly about how much they enjoy raping, torturing and killing helpless women, giving our protagonist convenient justification to kill them outright. Absolutely no depth or variety with the bad guys here.
Still, overall I'm going to call this one watchable. Definitely coming back for the second season, if it happens.
Yeah lol most revenge isekai have awful writing. There are good revenge animes, there are good isekai animes, but something about revenge animes with video game mechanics induce the exact same sort of setting where the protagonist is extraordinarily bullied by the entire world, the only characters that have remotely sympathetic motives end up in the protag's party, and they fall in love with the protag at first sight usually over the smallest morsel of politeness and courtesy. Failure frame's CGI animation was disgusting but at least the protagonist has a personality, and the suffering they put him through is cheap but really does at least make a convincing case for his revenge plot

It's not like redo of healer where the guy goes through more rape, torture and suffering than a russian literature epic. Time travels
to before the point of all his suffering. And instead of just avoiding the suffering, willingly goes through the exact same suffering in order to get revenge on the people he could've avoided ??
?
The Most Notorious Talker Runs the World's Greatest Clan stuck with me for a while, because the party betrays him and he immediately retaliates
and fucking sells them into slavery. Having a full on villainous protag is pretty fresh but it does get stale over the chapters because the protag gets surrounded by yes men who stop questioning his morality. It's interesting when he has one trusted friend who genuinely can't stomach selling their mutual friends into slavery, even after being betrayed by them, and it's a shame that after he leaves no character replaces that role of "moral conscience" to bounce off of the protag's corporate manager empathy
I Left My A-Rank Party to Help My Former Students Reach the Dungeon Depths! is a weird one, though probably for the better. It's in a weird place when you watch it because they have the party treating the protag like shit, but there's no act of betrayal - rather, chronic underappreciation and the protagonist just quits lol. They spend a lot of time focusing on the former party struggling, a bit like the Banished from the Hero's party one, but I'm not sure if it's story relevant? MC doesn't give a shit
The two that stand out to me are Banished from the Hero's Party, I Decided to Live a Quiet Life in the Countryside, and Apparently, Disillusioned Adventurers Will Save the World. Though neither of them are isekai, they both fit that whole vibe of starting with the protagonist being kicked out of their adventuring party. They're both amazing for the same reason though. The protagonists don't spend the rest of their lives fantasizing about revenge. They take the clean break, pick their feet up and get on with rebuilding their lives. Banished from the Hero's party does spend some time going over the hero's party falling apart, but it handles the "betrayal" in a fairly nice way, whilst integrating it into a plot about a dude who just wants to be a happy member of the community with his wife and family. Disillusioned Adventurers / Ningen Fushin just takes the standard revenge story and executes it with basic care and it just works. The characters don't instantly fall in love with one another, they just start off with an alliance of convenience, treating their partnership as an entirely profesisonal endeavour where they go their separate ways at the end of the day. The reasons why they get abandoned by others are not just ludicrous scum and villainy - it's a mix of prejudice, unfairness, and even sometimes a bit of their own fault, flaws or painful life choices