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8/5/2025, 12:01:51 PM
>>281202743
>Write an Anime Plot
Guys gets Isekai'd, but he doesn't land in a fake-faggot-video-game-system world: he's isekai'd into an actual "grounded" fantasy world. Luckily, his relevant skills are translated over (he can speak the language, read, write, high school, etc), but he's otherwise got to figure out how to live in a fantasy world where his video game knowledge is fucking useless: no exp, no menus, no levels, and no adventurers guilds.
It's more of a history drama, "foreigner in a foreign land", slow-burn kind of series. Explicitly not torture porn, just a guy going through the actual work to live in a strange land, picking up plots and skills through exposure. Guy gets adopted by a sympathetic Magician, who may actually be aware of the situation, and teaches him the ropes. Fantasy elements are used sparingly at key points in the story so the viewer doesn't "get used to them", but also to increase the deliberate alien nature and unnerving *horror element they bring to the show when they happen.
*Things like the dread of gods being actually objectively real on this planet and able to remotely monitor you whenever you say their name and can access any site a shrine has been set up for them.
The fact that sometimes your house doesn't have mice, but it's actually a little 5 inch man covered in black static that once they steal something you forget you ever had it.
An encounter with a goblin, but the goblin isn't a video game goblin, it's a 'real folklore' goblin: something like an off-proportioned humanoid creature in straw ghilli suit with a massive face filled with gnashing teeth and big bulging eyes.
That evil can actually just manifest as a quantifiable presence in reality - making people demented, sick, and reanimating the dead.
>Write an Anime Plot
Guys gets Isekai'd, but he doesn't land in a fake-faggot-video-game-system world: he's isekai'd into an actual "grounded" fantasy world. Luckily, his relevant skills are translated over (he can speak the language, read, write, high school, etc), but he's otherwise got to figure out how to live in a fantasy world where his video game knowledge is fucking useless: no exp, no menus, no levels, and no adventurers guilds.
It's more of a history drama, "foreigner in a foreign land", slow-burn kind of series. Explicitly not torture porn, just a guy going through the actual work to live in a strange land, picking up plots and skills through exposure. Guy gets adopted by a sympathetic Magician, who may actually be aware of the situation, and teaches him the ropes. Fantasy elements are used sparingly at key points in the story so the viewer doesn't "get used to them", but also to increase the deliberate alien nature and unnerving *horror element they bring to the show when they happen.
*Things like the dread of gods being actually objectively real on this planet and able to remotely monitor you whenever you say their name and can access any site a shrine has been set up for them.
The fact that sometimes your house doesn't have mice, but it's actually a little 5 inch man covered in black static that once they steal something you forget you ever had it.
An encounter with a goblin, but the goblin isn't a video game goblin, it's a 'real folklore' goblin: something like an off-proportioned humanoid creature in straw ghilli suit with a massive face filled with gnashing teeth and big bulging eyes.
That evil can actually just manifest as a quantifiable presence in reality - making people demented, sick, and reanimating the dead.
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