Scum of the Brave Episode 1 Review: Janky Animation Undermines Urban Fantasy Premise
The review highlights how a promising webnovel adaptation can be undermined by visible production shortcuts, making Scum of the Brave a case study in the gap between source material quality and anime execution.
Reporting from 1 sources: Anime Feminist.
The first episode of Scum of the Brave, based on a popular webnovel and webcomic, premiered with significant production issues. The anime follows down-on-his-luck deadbeat Yashiro and high schooler Aki as they fight demon-led crime in a modern Tokyo underworld. The review from Anime Feminist notes that the animation is notably janky, with vending machines changing orientation between shots and characters moving with a stilted quality, suggesting the show may have run out of time to polish its opening scenes. Despite the production problems, the series has a solid premise: a mix of urban shonen beat-em-up and fantasy, where crime lords are magical demons and the heroes-including high school students-are sanctioned to kill. The show introduces a system where Braves use injectors to gain magical superhuman strength, raising questions about long-term consequences. The cast includes Yashiro, a poor, lazy, short-tempered veteran, and Aki, a bubbly but morally grounded classmate. The review calls the series "run of the mill edgy battle-fantasy" with potential for fun if the animation quality holds up over the cour.
The first episode of Scum of the Brave struggles with inconsistent animation that betrays rushed production, according to a review from Anime Feminist. Vending machines shift orientation between cuts, and character movements feel stilted, suggesting the studio prioritized later scenes over the opening. The series is based on a popular webnovel that has already spawned a successful webcomic, giving it strong source material to draw from.
The urban fantasy setting places demon crime lords in control of Tokyo's underworld, with Braves-government-sanctioned fighters-using injectors to gain magical powers. The review notes this drug-use imagery invites questions about long-term effects and control. Yashiro, the grumpy veteran, and Aki, the idealistic high schooler, provide a standard odd-couple dynamic. The show's willingness to depict sanctioned killing and child soldiers sets it apart from typical fantasy fare, but the execution may not hold viewer interest if the animation does not improve.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.
Sources
- Anime Feminist Scum of the Brave – Episode 1