



The series is based on a manga written by Yasuhiro Nightow, who you may know as the writer of Trigun - a series that's kinda sexist when you think about it. But BBB on the whole is just not the least bit good, and I don't understand why anyone is trying to convince me otherwise. Maybe it had one of the most unique and eye-catching premises to come from the market in years. Maybe it has a character named Zapp Renfro. being directed by one of the most dynamic TV directors in the current market. Okay fine, maybe this anime has a swanky soundtrack. I mean Kyoani’s own beautiful anime with believable character motivations, depth to its story, and (most importantly of all) actual challenges the characters have to overcome came out in the same season around the same time, and yet it just sold decently - which is below the studio’s usual standards. If you've paid attention to the sales charts, you'll see that Blood Blockade Battlefront's current sales numbers are going toe-to-toe with Shirobako aka the most acclaimed and important anime series in recent times, and that just baffles me. Kekkai Sensen follows Leo's misadventures in the strangest place on Earth with his equally strange comrades-as the ordinary boy unwittingly sees his life take a turn for the extraordinary.

He soon runs into Libra, and when Leo unexpectedly joins their ranks, he gets more than what he bargained for. But when he obtains the "All-seeing Eyes of the Gods" at the expense of his sister's eyesight, he goes to Hellsalem's Lot in order to help her by finding answers about the mysterious powers he received. Pursuing photography as a hobby, Leonardo Watch is living a normal life with his parents and sister. Libra is a secret organization composed of eccentrics and superhumans, tasked with keeping order in the city and making sure that chaos doesn't spread to the rest of the world. When a gateway between Earth and the Beyond opened three years ago, New Yorkers and creatures from the other dimension alike were trapped in an impenetrable bubble and were forced to live together. Supersonic monkeys, vampires, talking fishmen, and all sorts of different supernatural monsters living alongside humans-this has been part of daily life in Hellsalem's Lot, formerly known as New York City, for some time now.
