Aquarion Logos · review
Says a saying "It hurts the pen more than the sword", that words can be man's most dangerous weapons. Various souls have more or less expressed this concept in a very tangible way, but, if you want to put it in the mecha area, how to do it? It would take, in fact, a very unpredictable mecha, like the same words and from what they can be born from them, and what better choice than that mecha with divine powers capable of accomplishing the unpredictable as the Aquarion? For this reason, for its tenth anniversary, the letters and words, together with the well-known concepts of lovecapable of winning any challenge, will be the fulcrum of this third spin-off series entitled "Aquarion Logos".
As per the typical Satelight tradition, the graphics make their figure, while in the OST area ... we say that there is a step backwards, but the dubbing can make their figure.
Despite being a spin-off of the previous series, "Logos" maintains all the typical elements of the saga, including a very varied cast of characters and personalities, with characters who often tell something about them with episodes dedicated to them and with romance present in the air, very characterized and unpredictable enemies in terms of position, twists and backstory that clarify the doubts to the viewer on why those who do this or how that thing etc. happened, and love stories dating back 12,000 years ago ( I often wonder why this number will move the gears of history; and obviously we pass to the clashes that, if in the previous series they were under the banner of unpredictability, here they will reach unpredictable unpredictability levels, with monster-words with disparate powers as absurd as in the forms, as in the Aquarions, here with the higher number of configurations and unpredictable in terms of forms and powers.
Although I adore Aquarion this anime does not bind to the two sages