Review of K
I watched K Project not really for the character development nor the story, but simply it was such an enjoyable story. I never really found anything that made the story and character development worthwhile to mention. The art is simply fantastic. It pops out, and it actually looks extremely pretty. The scenery gives a feeling of happiness that completely mirrors Shiro's happy-go-lucky personality. The characters are also particularly cute, especially Shiro. But the other characters all have artistic aspects of them that make them particularly likable. The sound synergizes well with the art, meaning that it's particularly beautiful. It is the third anime out of thousandsthat I openly went "Woah! The music is incredible!" (After Code Geass and Owari no Seraph -- and this music is better than that from those animes!). Mikoto's theme is notable because I love the combination of the drumset and partial orchestra. Shiro's theme is pure beauty. The opening theme is beautiful and the type that you wouldn't get tired of listening to for thirteen episodes straight. Unfortunately, I can't judge the ending scene too much because I was way too distracted with Neko's lack of clothing... and because I had to skip over it since I was afraid my parents would look over my shoulders and wonder what I was looking at.
The characters hold a tad bit of unrealisticness, but they all are particularly likable. Truly, Mikoto is the best king that anyone could ask for, with a hidden side of compassion mixed with his anger. Totsuka shows the power of peace. Yata is amazingly stereotypical of an angry teenager, but that's more likable points from me. Izumo is an oddball for his ability to stay calm (even weirder since he's part of HOMRA). Neko is just plain creative and original, I've never heard of having a naked cat lady in the main role. Shiro's personality makes him thoroughly likable, and his antics with Kurou are funny.
There isn't much to say about the story. It's okay. I accidentally spoiled it for myself while going on Wikia for some clarification information, so... woops. It wasn't as confusing, thank goodness. The only judgment for the story is the wow factor at how such an original idea came from an original work. Not something commonplace.
So to sum it up, this anime was truly a one-of-a-kind, and I kinda understand why the fujoshis would converge around this anime, but it holds much more than just shipping Mikoto and Kei.