Weekly Review: No. 6

Plot / Story

No. 6 is the most recent town that's been constructed. The town was constructed for a utopia, in which there would be no poverty, grief, or uncertainty. We follow the life span of Shion, a very wise boy who lives in No. 6 with his own mommy. Shion has just discovered he's qualified for the gifted program, which can be quite a big thing. But 1 night in a typhoon he receives an unexpected visitor. From the door to his outside deck stood a bloated, wounded boy throughout his era. Rather than calling for his mommy or operating in panic, he decides to assist the injured boy. The boy says that his name is Rat, that comes to a significant jolt for our privileged chief. He lets Rat to utilize his bed for some rest even when he learns he is a"fugitive" that's being hunted right now.
The subsequent days weren't great for Shion. The officials discovered that he assisted a famous fugitive and they wouldn't take it gently. He and his mom were forced from the own life of privilege. His mother ends up opening a little bakery to they reside in also. Included in Shion's punishment, he's no longer permitted to register to the gifted program. Our narrative skips ahead four decades in the time Shion first fulfilled Rat.
His coworker actually shuns him doubting the officers, something which isn't taken lightly in this town. Only afterward, Shion's coworker suddenly begins aging quite quickly until he drops to the floor dead. To Shion's terror, a little wasp then emerges out of his currently dropped coworkers neck. This was just the start of the hardship for youthful Shion.
Rather than being shielded by the officers, they banning him and ship him off into the correctional facility (aka a very terrible place). While he's being hauled, Rat creates a heroic look and conserves Shion. They escape to a place out No. 6 called West Block. This is the area where Rat reveals Shion how life is in fact out of their"utopia." Shion initially does not know Rat's hatred toward town, but while the state in the city grows more and more suspicious, Shion finally learns what precisely the utopia is concealing.
Total
I actually didn't expect that much from the brief anime collection. The first episode is sort of dry and off, however as you advance through the show you actually get attached to the characters. That is, for certain, a play series. It's some experience and activity components, but it mostly concentrates on the association between Rat and Shion. It is nothing on the top, and that I really did not care.
Comments