The Weekly Orbit is a (sometimes) weekly column collecting and refining my more casual anime- and manga-related thoughts from the previous week. Mostly, these are taken from my tumblr blog, and assume familiarity with the works covered. Be wary of spoilers!
It’s been a minute! But I am a bit over belaboring the point; I do these when I have the energy to do them now.
Thus, a roundup of what I’ve watched this past week.
Seasonal Anime
Gachiakuta – Episode 2
I watched this while, among other things, clipping my toenails, which feels about right.
Jokes aside, I am a bit stunned by how non-invested I still am in this story. It’s cool that the show is willing to be genuinely kind of gross and unpleasant, given that it takes place in a giant garbage dump, but I also don’t really feel much for the main character which makes his rage hard to empathize with even if his reasons for it are completely understandable. He just—there is no politer way to put it—comes off as a bit cringey. It’s a teenager’s idea of what having real problems is like. “What if everyone was mean to you constantly and betrayed you and treated you like shit and it made you so mad that your secret superpowers awakened?” Again, I’m criticizing a show for kids here, so I don’t wanna be too mean, and if some 15 year old thinks this is the best thing ever I’m not gonna tell them otherwise. But it just feels a little short on actual ideas or stakes to me so far.
Enjin [Konishi Katsuyuki]—Umbrella Guy as I will be calling him—is kinda cool, but not enough to be a supporting cast on its own, so hopefully we start meeting some of the other people in the OP sooner rather than later. The bit at the end of this episode with the other poor Groundlings just stunned me. I realize this is probably not what the show is *trying* to say, but it sure feels like we’re doing something to the tune of “Yeah, rich people who destroy the environment are evil, but do you know who’s also evil? People who are too poor.” And I simply cannot get onboard with that, if I’m honest.
When I first wrote this over on tumblr I mentioned that I wasn’t dropping the show yet because I wanted to give it another chance, but it’s a bit more up in the air at this point. The series’ third episode has been delayed on account of election coverage in Japan, and I find it harder to imagine I’ll still have time and mental bandwidth for this show in two weeks. We’ll see, though.
Ruri Rocks / Introduction to Mineralogy – Episode 2
A delightful second episode from this one. I like Ruri’s little bit of character development over the course of this episode where she goes from being disappointed about the financial lack of value in pyrite to refusing to sell a rare gold sample because it means more to her to have it than having the money would.
Overall, I’d say this show is more cute and lightly entertaining than anything, but in moments like the one where she finds that lump of gold, the series really does come alive in a very vivid and poetic way. I hope to see it lean more into that going forward.
Turkey! Time to Strike – Episode 2
I was a little worried that Turkey would—aha—fumble the ball when it came time to commit to its actual premise as opposed to its fakeout faux-premise. I am pleased to report that this has not happened.
There are a few hiccups in this second episode, but not anything major, and by all indications this is about to be a really nice little time travel adventure series. I like how era shocked the girls (understandably) are throughout much of this episode, although the bandits who try to assault them are maybe a little too much of a jump from episode one right out the gate. Still, overall this was great.
If I have to give a shout out to any one moment in particular, it’s at the very end of the episode. Suguri [Inoue Kikuko], a Sengoku warrior who rescued the girls from the bandits (and was then rescued by them in turn when he was captured), takes them to the estate he lives on. There, we see that a character we’ve yet to properly meet, but who Anilist tells me is named Sumomo [Hidaka Noriko], is playing what can only be described as Sengoku-era bowling. It’s hilarious, and is the culmination of a surprising amount of bowling related trickery in this episode. (Have you ever wanted to see a Sengoku-era bandit get clubbed in the head with a bowling ball? Turkey delivers). The plot twist at the end of the first episode is that this is not a show about bowling. The plot twist throughout episode two is that, actually, it very much is about bowling.
Necronomico & The Cosmic Horror Show – Episode 3
So first of all, I cannot fucking believe there’s a completely straight-faced “if you die in the game….YOU DIE IN REAL LIFE!” in here.
Secondly, wow, the male characters on the human side of things sure completely fucking suck, huh? Other than I guess maybe Hat Guy, whose whole deal we don’t really know yet. This episode sees Eita—the gamer, you’ll recall, and the guy I flagged as the most annoying character in the first episode—betray the almost-as-annoying mangaka character NAO-KICHI [Ichikawa Taichi], tricking Nao into trapping himself in with one of the enemies in this particular death game. (At least partly because Eita was a fan of Nao’s manga but hated its ending. Can you imagine this happening to, I don’t know, the Jujutsu Kaisen guy?) Eita is theoretically more interesting as a villain, but in practice he’s about the same level of insufferable, just to different ends. It doesn’t help that his entire motivation seems to be that he thinks the world is “a shitty place,” which I guess entitles him to be Gamer Light Yagami. He also gets caught gloating at Nao’s death, meaning that his good guy cover is blown almost immediately. Rather incredibly, this happens while he’s condescendingly telling Nao that it’s easier to fool people if they think they’re smart. You don’t say?
Elsewhere in the episode, the teacher character “hilariously” admits he’s a pedo, which would maybe inspire some kind of reaction in me if I had previously thought about him even a little bit. Like, I didn’t care about this character before, but you’ve given him one defining trait and you’re treating it like a joke, so what am I to do with this information? It comes off as very amateur hour, and is pretty easily the worst and dumbest thing in the episode.
Cthulu is a highlight here, and I like her unironic shoujo villain laugh and I hope we get to hear it many more times over the course of the show. Other than that, this is turning out to be a bit of a trainwreck so far. Entertaining, but perhaps not for the intended reasons.
CITY The Animation – Episode 2
I think this is a list-topper of “anime whose worlds I’d most like to spend a two week vacation in.” I know it’s basically just Japan but it’s so utterly whimsical and fantastical that it just makes me want to live there. Also, the after-credits sequence with the demons was fantastic. Maybe the funniest single bit in this show so far? I just about cried when the Ars Goetia demon showed up.
My Dress-Up Darling Season 2 – Episode 2
Another delightful episode this week. The whole “Marin getting sick” plot was really sweet and well-handled. I said this on bluesky but I love how much of this show is powered by the fact that Marin is both a super hot gyaru and the sort of loser who’d own an ahegao shirt. One finds character depth in contradictions, even very silly ones. (Of course, much the point of Dress-Up Darling is that there’s not actually that much of a gap between these things as one might assume.)
As for the new character, the crossplayer, I’m a bit undecided. I feel like as a trans woman I’m kind of expected to have a kneejerk negative reaction to femboy characters. (Maybe that expectation only exists in my head? I’m not sure.) But I think this guy is fine. He seems nice, and the ending scene that gives the episode its title is funny. I’m obviously hoping we don’t do anything weird or offputting with him, but this show has never been like that, so I don’t think it will.
Anime – Non-Seasonal
California Crisis: Gun Salvo
Honestly, this is pretty much exactly as fantastic as everyone who recommends it says it is. Just 45 minutes of California as imagined by a Japanese creative team [led by Video Girl Ai director Nishikubo Mizuho], and it’s maybe the most flattering depiction of the US ever put to film. Bright, sunny, summer days, hot, neon-lit nights, filtered through a light sci-fi plot that essentially just kinda stops at the end of the movie. The narrative isn’t the point, though, as this is a visual showcase first and foremost and it’s a fucking great one. I see why people love this so much.
Like what you’re reading? Consider following Magic Planet Anime to get notified when new articles go live. If you’d like to talk to other Magic Planet Anime readers, consider joining my Discord server! Also consider following me on Anilist, BlueSky, or Tumblr and supporting me on Ko-Fi. If you want to read more of my work, consider heading over to the Directory to browse by category.
All views expressed on Magic Planet Anime are solely my own opinions and conclusions and should not be taken to reflect the opinions of any other persons, groups, or organizations. All text is manually typed and edited, and no machine learning or other automatic tools are used in the creation of Magic Planet Anime articles, with the exception of a basic spellchecker. However, some articles may have additional tags placed by WordPress. All text, excepting direct quotations, is owned by Magic Planet Anime. Do not duplicate without permission. All images are owned by their original copyright holders.






Pingback: Anime and Manga Blog Posts That Caught My Eye This Week (July 25, 2025) – Lesley's Anime and Manga Corner