Petals of Reincarnation Episode 1 Review Criticizes Historical Figure Handling
The review frames Petals of Reincarnation as a case study in the ethical pitfalls of using real historical atrocities as entertainment, a critique that may resonate beyond this single premiere given the current global political climate.
Reporting from 1 sources: Anime Feminist.
Anime Feminist published a review of the first episode of Petals of Reincarnation, a new series on HiDive. The review, written by a former academic with a background in history and museum studies, examines the premiere's premise: high schooler Touya Senji enters a hidden world of Returners and Sinners, modern humans who embody historical figures and their abilities. The reviewer acknowledges the appeal of the concept, comparing it to Hetalia and Fate in its use of real historical figures in a dark fantasy setting. However, the review strongly criticizes the series for including figures like Pol Pot and Hitler as characters, arguing that the show lacks nuance and fails to responsibly handle the real-world horrors these individuals represent. The reviewer calls the premiere a "four-tiered premiere of cream cheese icing over shit when you dig down," stating that flashy animation and a strong ending theme cannot compensate for what they see as a problematic and shallow treatment of history. The review concludes that there are better historical studies and edgier anime to watch instead.
The review, published on April 6, 2026, opens with a content warning for blood, gore, self-inflicted injury, and death. The reviewer, who holds an MA in History and a certificate in Museum Studies, chose to cover the series because they anticipated it would be one of the most discussed shows of the season, despite being on HiDive. They describe the premiere's plot: Touya Senji, a high schooler feeling average next to his overachieving brother, meets classmate Haito Luo Buffet, who embodies Miyamoto Musashi. Touya gains access to a world of Returners ("Greats" using historic skills for good) and Sinners (criminals, murderers, dictators). The reviewer notes the system of Branches of Reincarnation as a cool concept but questions why it was necessary to reincarnate figures like Pol Pot and Hitler as Sinners, especially in a time of global fascism and nationalist upheaval. They argue the series lacks nuance and will likely present these figures as flashy villains without exploring the real horrors they committed. The review concludes by stating the show is not worth viewers' time, recommending other series instead.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.
Sources
- Anime Feminist Petals of Reincarnation – Episode 1