Digimon Adventure (1999) | An Underrated Isekai Gem



In this video I summarise the entire original series of Digimon, & cover some of the fair, as well as unfair criticisms the OG series …

source

13 thoughts on “Digimon Adventure (1999) | An Underrated Isekai Gem”

  1. The movie that explain how kari knows is called Digimon adventure from 1999, which serves as the prologue of the original anime. Our war game is the sequel where they debut Omegamon. The sequence is kinda f up since in western those 2 movies (alongside Digimon 02 movie, which takes place after 02 anime series) are put in a single movie called Digimon adventure the Movie

    Reply
  2. I first saw Digimon on a VHS tape. There was recorded some random series with English dub, overdubbed by my native, Latvian language. At that time I was a child, so I didn't understand a lot of things, but I really loved these series. When I got older, I got to watch the full, original series with subtitles and I understood, how much English dub (and direct translation from Eng dub to Latvian) changed things. There was a whole lot of things made more "comic" or "funny" instead of more serious and dark like it was in the original. I don't know, if there is better dub now, but I woudn't reccomend to watch that old dub at all.
    Also, this video is really good. A lot of things said, that were lost by a lot of another reviewers, but I was a bit of sad, because you skipped Joe's and Mimi's arcs. Thanks for the video ~

    Reply
  3. The “Digimon is a pokemon ripoff” crowd are the flat earthers lol

    I’m honestly glad that it never took Pokemon’s popularity back in the 90s, I remember there were a lot of religious fanatics that thinks Pokemon is the devil, of they think Pokemon is like that, then I can’t imagine how they’d perceive Digimon, a series that has a literal digital devil

    Reply
  4. It's one of my favourite shows, and it still holds up to this day. Besides the rightly criticised nineties humour and the few instances where the 10 and 11 year old characters was sexualised. Yeah eugh.
    I don't think I like Digimon for being Digimon in it self, but the way it can be a unique vessel or platform for interesting stories were it fx can highlight sociological or psychological issues. The character work is stellar especially for the target audience. Perhaps the show is even to subtle for children that age, but it does heighten the rewatch value. It doesn't talk down to its audience which is among the reasons it's so great.
    Hot take here: the les digitalized Digimon is the better. I love the contrast between the world being digital and then how it appears so natur like. You can though ask the question how it can be so good when it leans on so, so many tropes. It, I'll say, grounds itself with the children's family issues. And who can't relate to some of them?

    Reply

Leave a Comment