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Dungeon ni deai wo motomeru no wa machigatteiru darou ka
Dungeon ni deai wo motomeru no wa machigatteiru darou ka







the MC is swarmed by women because he is physically attractive, has a pleasant personality, and is a famous prodigy (“bElL iS gEnErIc sELf-iNseRt” - a low-intelligence wannabe critic). Instead of using these elements mindlessly, or attempting to reject/subvert them, the story tasked itself with building a world where they make logical sense.

dungeon ni deai wo motomeru no wa machigatteiru darou ka

The MC is overpowered and wins every fight. Any arguments to the contrary, particularly the ones based on the semantics of the words “another world” (which is NOT how “isekai” translates from Japanese) are an exercise in mental deficiency.Īnyway, the “depth” (quotes to emphasize the fact that many people that like using this word as a praise of anime shows they like wouldn’t recognize depth if it bit their ass and held on) of Season One of Danmachi comes from the fact that it took the building blocks of SAO and treated them as speculative fiction. Since I can hear autistic screeching all the way from here, do note that “isekai” as an anime genre name means action-adventure fantasy with JRPG mechanics, or even more precisely, the “SAO clone” (the same way “first-person shooter” is the “Doom clone” genre).

dungeon ni deai wo motomeru no wa machigatteiru darou ka

Season One was a straightforward generic isekai, being distinguished only by the high quality of execution.

#Dungeon ni deai wo motomeru no wa machigatteiru darou ka series#

This is just one example of this series having more substance than meets the eye, as Danmachi, for all of its mainstream popularity, still happens to be a pleb filter anime that your average wannabe connoisseur of arts is too low-IQ to like (while simultaneously believing in the opposite). And then there is a double entendre on top of that, “encounter” can be a “rendezvous” withĪ girl - be it a Sword Princess or a blue dragon loli. that is a meaningful question without one right answer, the risk versus reward deal. If you “seek” random encounters, you probably are deliberately grinding XP to get ahead, but you’re also risking to overexert yourself or run into something you can’t deal with. Did you know that the real translation of “Dungeon ni Deai wo Motomeru no wa Machigatteiru Darou ka” into English is “Is It Wrong to Seek Encounters in a Dungeon?” - “encounter” being the random encounter mechanic from the classic JRPGs like Final Fantasy.







Dungeon ni deai wo motomeru no wa machigatteiru darou ka