Anime ending that disappointed you

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Harold Hansen

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Oct 6, 2011
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snave said:
The George Dubya Bush rant was kinda odd though.
Yeah, I was kind of hoping Kei would have a response, but of course all Japanese protagonists have an inner tool that either comes out sometimes or is a defining characteristic of their personality.

snave said:
To put your mind at ease though:
It actually happens, and the influence of the Gantz extends well beyond Tokyo. The comic is in its last few weeks right now actually. Worth the read, but fair warning: it gets much more depraved as it progresses.
I don't like reading manga. It's fine that it has a target audience, but people like me would rather watch the pictures in motion.

snave said:
Worst for me would be Evangelion, simply because I hate the idea that the artist couldn't seem to make their mind up on a single definitive ending.
I stopped watching that one after the first fifteen minutes in. I have described in detail the severity of my annoyance with the protagonist's voice in a comment on one of Yahtzee's videos. That was my main gripe. The way his tool persona came out in the way his voice sounded was what caused me to "FUCK NO."

I can sympathize with the Fullmetal Alchemist haters. That last episode in the series that had its own original story was one huge troll, and not the good kind. After watching Fullmetal Alchemist and finding out that there was a different version they were working on(at the time) that would follow the story more closely, I had to jump. It was done so well, with the references to hell and demons, and the horror mood that was used throughout the series. Me and Brotherhood, we just clicked, you know? And then one thing led to another...
 

Lunias

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Mar 29, 2011
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Shockolate said:
Lunias said:
My least favorite anime endings of all time would still have to be the ending to every single season of Pokemon. Not only does Ash never beat the entire Elite Four or his rival, but he always manages to get rid of most of his Pokemon by the next season. Yeah, continuity, we get it. Even so, it makes for some of the most predictable (and boring) endings of anime.
Sorry, but Ash defeated Gary during the Silver Conference (Johto) and Paul during the Lily of the Valley Conference (Sinnoh).

But then he got trashed immediatly after. It's still predictable, yes.
Oh, did I not say that correctly? I meant to say that he hasn't beaten his rival and the Elite Four in any season so far. Stupid English, why are you so hateful?!
 

scorptatious

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May 14, 2009
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Well there's Kare Kano.

That show started off really well in my opinion. Unfortunately, about half-way through, the people who made the show started making some really stupid decisions.

For starters, at the beginning of nearly every episode, they gave a summary of pretty much all the events that had happened before the episode. It got annoying after a while, but I managed. And then they decided to spend TWO WHOLE EPISODES using clips from all the previous episodes to recap everything that had happened up to that point. That has got to be the most blatant and lazy example of filler I have ever seen in an anime.

Later on, the show started taking some weird turns. One episode had all the characters in the form of paper puppets, and another episode was in a different art style.

And the last episode, urrrgh...

For some reason, for one character, I forgot what his name was, during his scenes, they did this weird artsy bullshit in which his words appeared on-screen which were read out by the narrator. This made absolutely no sense and sort of bugged the crap out of me.

The worst part is, that wasn't even the conclusion to the story. From my knowledge the show got cancelled. Which made sense I guess, considering all the bullshit I just mentioned above. The show attempted to take it's show in a weird direction and it ultimately killed itself. Which is a shame, from what I've read in the manga version I really liked it.

EDIT: Well shit, I'm watching the first episode again. Damn you theme song, Y U SO GOOD?? X(
 

Konaerix

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May 19, 2010
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I could list several series that have already been mentioned on this thread but I feel that Angel Beats deserves a special mention.

I really loved the series, but fucking hell... an Evangelion "congratulations" ending would have been more subtle!
 

FrozenSkye

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Jan 8, 2012
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Air Gear for sure, it ends and you're just wanting more, much much more.

Konaerix said:
I could list several series that have already been mentioned on this thread but I feel that Angel Beats deserves a special mention.

I really loved the series, but fucking hell... an Evangelion "congratulations" ending would have been more subtle!
I agree here. They could have taken that anime and done an incredible ending, and what the hell was it so heavy in the Matrix reference for? I get why they referenced it, kind of makes sense to go that route, but c'mon.
 

LawlessSquirrel

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Jun 9, 2010
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Soul Eater was a massive letdown by the end. The last two episodes start strong at first, but turn into nonsense. Majority of the last arc goes like that, actually.

Animes in general do like to pull the 'story's over...but here's a possibility to think about' ending a lot, which makes finishing one a sad experience, but I think in general it works for the genre. Soul Eater though...I won't spoil anything, but it's one of the more ridiculous conclusions I've seen in the sense that the ending is undeserved.

There's even a major point of deus ex machina that...doesn't do anything, and then is immediately forgotten. My mind boggles trying to figure out why it would be included at all.

Also Blood+. For the most part, I liked the ending, and I'd consider it an anime that gets better the longer you watch, but:

Just give him your freaking blood! The most heart-breaking thought for Saya is losing....uh, I forget his name (it's been a long while), and his problem is that he feels useless next to all the blood-powered creatures. Both problems are solved by her giving him blood, making him powerful enough to protect people and letting him live long enough to be there for her when she reawakens.
I must have waited over 15 episodes for them to figure it out, but they never even bring up the possibility. It wasn't a horrible ending, but it was frustrating in that regard.
 

BlackEyedBetty

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Jul 17, 2012
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Rednog said:
I'll be honest, most anime endings are really terrible, they either jump the shark during the finale or give you a giant plate of mess. I wonder if it is because a lot are finished before the manga they are based off end.

About a month ago someone forced me to sit through all of Trigun at once, and I was like oh man I really enjoy this....wait what is this space children nonsense....oh god make it end! Why? Why did you go this route?!
I'm surprised no one brought this up sooner. Trigun is still one of my favorite shows of all time and the concept in general was really cool, but that ending just left me scratching my head. I loved knives and i wished they had fleshed out his character more. The two parallels used with Vash and Knives to examine morality could have been really cool. Instead we just got kind of a weak final battle.
 

BlackEyedBetty

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Jul 17, 2012
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MPerce said:
Evangelion. Because, you know, it's one of the most infamously shitty endings of anything ever, and it always deserves to be mentioned no matter how much everyone's talked about it. I couldn't get too angry about the ME3 ending because all of the "what the fuck did I just watch" in me had already been used on Eva.

Congratulations, my ass....stupid penguin.

At least the movie provided some slight closure in the form of pure unadulterated horror.
Eva has an amazing ending, but it's just something you have to think about. Initially yes, on a gut level the ending doesn't make a lot of sense, but after some thought and analysis it makes some powerful philosophical statements and wraps up the main subtext of the series i.e. the relation of identity to others and the profound psychological effects this identity struggle can have. It's actually better if you watch the movie then the series ending since technically that's how it should be chronologically.
 

Dragonpit

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Nov 10, 2010
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Orphen. The first season was fine, but the second season was just a bunch of generic gag/comedy episodes like the ones you'd see in Slayers. Hell, even the characters start leaning that way. I dunno, I guess it could also be attributed to the fact that it's no longer personal for the main character. In the end, all the real plot development takes place in the last few episodes, with deus ex machinas popping in left and right for the sake of cohesion. It results in what can only be another generic feel-good ending almost any clone anime has. That is what the anime becomes in the end. It's not bad, truly. It starts off truly powerful in its own right, but turns into another copy in the end.