I’ve posted a few weeks ago about Frieren being the first anime I properly watched start to finish as I would watch another seriously TV show. I actually found it from a video comparing the character development of “Frieren” to that of “Rings of Power”. Which goes as expected.

Anyway, after rewatching it 4 times now (eng dub, eng dub + eng sub, jap + eng subs and again just the eng dub (I’ts good)) and reading the manga up the the anime timeline and watching like 30 youtube videos analysing the show just to make sure I didn’t miss anything … I think there is one point that no one has brought up yet (I expect to be corrected).

It’s an MMORPG. And you (Frieren) is the hardcore gamer that played since beta and never quit. You had your old parties (guilds or clans) which whom you played when you were young but lost all connection but your own memory to.

I’m not a writer so these a basically just random thoughts delivered very poorly structured. But the show makes so many video game refenrences. The general need for having a “warrior” as a tank, a priest as a healer … and well mostly mages as damage dealers. But I guess Himmel was kind of an Quest oriented offsensive warrior, while Eisen was their tank.

But in the later seasons they references to literal “dungeon raids” and finding loot, exploring every level (and side quest) along the way …

It’s a fundamentally a MMORPG video game story. Obviously it goes much deeper than that and has all the great aspects off a great show beyond this point.

But am I crazy for thinking that? Or is it maybe one of the reason this show resonates so well with people?

A great example is Friens obession with very rare but useless loot.

  • RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The same could be said about a very old and decorated DnD character.

    I haven’t watched Frieren, and everytime I tell myself to watch it I end up getting distracted by something else, but I will say that the large supermajority of anime and manga set in the fantasy genre is heavily inspired by video game or tabletop RPGs set in fantasy worlds. It is rare to find something that doesn’t have that influence. Heck, Record of Lodoss War was literally the authors’ TTRPG recorded as a story and then refined into LN/anime form. And I mean, why not? TTRPGs are basically just collective storytelling but with rules, who says you can’t publish those as fantasy stories?

    • tobogganablaze@lemmus.orgOP
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      3 months ago

      Yeah. I realise now that had a very backwards reasoning. I even know the basicas about TTRPGs. Just didn’t connect the dots.