Skip to content
Home » [Update] Dr. Stone | voice from the stone pantip – NATAVIGUIDES

[Update] Dr. Stone | voice from the stone pantip – NATAVIGUIDES

voice from the stone pantip: นี่คือโพสต์ที่เกี่ยวข้องกับหัวข้อนี้

In truth, this show is about Senku: The prideful genius who makes it his job to help everyone through science. Senku is overconfident to a fault. He prides himself on being ten billion percent logical, and he likes to think he’ll always be right. Honestly, he makes his fair share of mistakes. He might be able to make a high-speed wagon in a couple of minutes, but don’t expect it not to fall apart the first time he rides it. Seeing the show from his perspective is fantastic. He’s not another overpowered blank-slate isekai protagonist who gets pushed through the story by coincidence. The story’s direction is unpredictable because Senku is a force of nature. His encyclopedic knowledge of science is his main advantage. He’s not invincible, he makes impactful decisions, and he makes mistakes. Much of the time, he has a utilitarian motive behind any of his kind actions. If he needs a lot of manpower, he baits villagers with ramen, with hard labor as their payment. It was always funny seeing the different ways he would trick people into doing what he wanted.

In this show, a life or death situation lies on whether or not Senku can create Coca-Cola from scratch. It does not attempt to hide how ridiculous it is. At the same time, it will also detail how to make cola with science. Once they have all parts of the latest science scheme working, we get a quick montage of it in action. He explains each scientific idea comprehensively before everyone begins working. It’s all said in simple terms so the audience can follow along. I’ll be honest; I don’t know much about science. I slept through biology, chemistry, and physics. Somehow Dr. Stone got me to love science. Senyu taught me science can solve every problem. Like all good edutainment programs, the teachings are seamlessly weaved into the story.

The main characters are so likable—not just for their personalities and chemistry—because they have personal goals and senses of humor. The writers make sure to give each member of the science squad a considerate amount of development. For some of them, it’s only a few minutes shoved in-between arcs, but their growth is visible throughout the rest of the show. I’ve said all I needed to say about Senku—he’s the heart of the show. He has a subdued personality; even admitting he prefers not to show much emotion, but the show always subtly clues us in to how he’s truly feeling. One of his pals, Kohaku, is entirely the opposite: She’s a spirited girl who takes no shit.

On the other hand, his partner Chrome is another avid science fan, but he’s more relatable because he isn’t quite a super genius. He made a great deuteragonist, but I missed the original side characters Taiju and Yuzuihara. They’re a pleasant enough duo even though they’re only in a couple of episodes. I wish the story occasionally cut to their perspective. In the beginning, it’s exciting watching Senku and Taiju trying to survive in the stone age. In a life or death situation, they revive the strongest man they can find, Tsukasa. With his revival, the antagonist enters the show. I’ve seen people criticize Tsukasa and say he’s a weak villain, and I can’t help but disagree. His goal for the stone world is to give everyone equal opportunity; no one will pay taxes; no one will own anything in simpler terms, libertarianism. To achieve his dream for the stone world, he endeavors to kill every petrified adult. He wants only to revive the strongest youth he can find, or the “pure-hearted youth,” as he hypocritically calls them.

The first arc is an action-packed battle of wits, hunting for food, running from lions, creating the cure for humanity, friends reunite after thousands of years, the goddamn world ends. It’s kind of epic. It’s entirely unlike the bulk of the story, which is fine. It was an unexpected but welcome change of pace. I came for the exhilarating premise; I stayed for Senku and his band of goofy science trailblazers. When watching Dr. Stone weekly, my biggest problem was the slow pacing of the main plotlines. After rewatching the entire show, the progression didn’t bother me as much. Even if it looks like the show forgot about your favorite character—don’t worry—they’ll be back.

Dr. Stone thoughtfully uses reincorporation in its narrative to hint at future plot points, new characters and foreshadow meaningful twists. In one of the early episodes, someone mentioned a specific electronic he missed from the old world; as Senku progresses science, he reflects on that conversation nostalgically and endeavors to make that same electronic. It seemed so insignificant at first, yet it became a central plot point later on. One of my favorite characters, Gen, the magician, is subtly mentioned in a book long before being introduced. Another clue sprinkled throughout is the modern pop culture references, which contrast with the archaic society. There’s a pretty awesome in-story explanation for the villagers to use derivatives of modern Japanese. I have to give props to the writer for making someone from the stone age say “meme” without ruining the timeline.

These small victories might not seem like much on their own, but together it shows great foresight from the author. Senku’s occasional unforeseen scientific solution comes to life satisfyingly—surprising both the audience and the other characters. Like any engaging twist, Senku’s science is never contrived; every twist left me in awe. I could always look back and see the clues the writer creatively laid out. If the writer weren’t just as brilliant as Senku, then he would not work. Thankfully, he is, and that’s why Senku’s a great protagonist. You could argue there’s a lot of unexplained science in this series. I’d say it’s not bad. There’s no concrete explanation for the stone epidemic, and that’s fine. I don’t know science. I know stories. As long as the science stays consistent with its own internal logic, I think it has succeeded, and Dr. Stone does.

The humor is over-the-top but well-executed. It relies entirely on comedic timing and the presentation. Thankfully the editing in Dr. Stone is top-notch. Every part of the audiovisual production works in unison. The BGM, openings, and endings were all superb—this is the best soundtrack I’ve heard all year. Each background song is deftly synced up with scene transitions and set pieces. Jokes land with boisterous sound effects—absurd facial expressions pop-up on the screen, lined-up perfectly with the punchline. I understand why people have criticized the comedy for being idiotic. And they’re right. All of these characters are either idiots or socially inept. If you don’t like them, you’ll hate the comedy aspects. The jokes mainly rely on the character chemistry and, fantastic directing aside, I think they have hilarious chemistry. Other than the stellar character artwork (warning: some of the female faces are borderline Lovecraftian horrors), the backgrounds are consistently beautiful. TMS Entertainment continues to provide great still art; however, the longer the show went on, the more animation hiccups I noticed.

Dr. Stone gets heavily scrutinized for its plot progression, pacing, and dumb characters. Some of the criticism is fair, but much of it underserved. I consider myself pretty critical, and I enjoyed this show way more than I thought I would. The amount of research put into the science blew me away. The way it entertained me while teaching me felt so nostalgic. I grew up on edutainment, like Bill Nye The Science Guy and Magic Schoolbus. This anime follows in their footsteps, but for an older audience.
I never expected I would love these characters so much. I’m looking forward to their science shenanigans next season. It took humanity two million years to crawl out of the stone age to the modern era. Thankfully, it only took twenty-four weeks for people to realize Dr. Stone is a great anime.

all, if you are expecting a grand story about reconstructing the 21st century within twenty-four episodes, you will be disappointed. I initially assumed this would be a dystopian action-adventure—it’s not; this is an edutainment comedy about science. I understand why this direction frustrated a lot of people. The trailers and promotional material were misleading. Unfortunately, this led to people harshly nitpicking it. It blows my mind that people have said the writing is shallow, without redeeming value and lacking focus. This series successfully uses an unreliable narrator; this gives it a sense of unpredictability. Anything can happen. It’s exhilarating. I’m not going to pretend like this anime is perfect, but it’s way better than some would lead you to believe.In truth, this show is about Senku: The prideful genius who makes it his job to help everyone through science. Senku is overconfident to a fault. He prides himself on being ten billion percent logical, and he likes to think he’ll always be right. Honestly, he makes his fair share of mistakes. He might be able to make a high-speed wagon in a couple of minutes, but don’t expect it not to fall apart the first time he rides it. Seeing the show from his perspective is fantastic. He’s not another overpowered blank-slate isekai protagonist who gets pushed through the story by coincidence. The story’s direction is unpredictable because Senku is a force of nature. His encyclopedic knowledge of science is his main advantage. He’s not invincible, he makes impactful decisions, and he makes mistakes. Much of the time, he has a utilitarian motive behind any of his kind actions. If he needs a lot of manpower, he baits villagers with ramen, with hard labor as their payment. It was always funny seeing the different ways he would trick people into doing what he wanted.In this show, a life or death situation lies on whether or not Senku can create Coca-Cola from scratch. It does not attempt to hide how ridiculous it is. At the same time, it will also detail how to make cola with science. Once they have all parts of the latest science scheme working, we get a quick montage of it in action. He explains each scientific idea comprehensively before everyone begins working. It’s all said in simple terms so the audience can follow along. I’ll be honest; I don’t know much about science. I slept through biology, chemistry, and physics. Somehow Dr. Stone got me to love science. Senyu taught me science can solve every problem. Like all good edutainment programs, the teachings are seamlessly weaved into the story.The main characters are so likable—not just for their personalities and chemistry—because they have personal goals and senses of humor. The writers make sure to give each member of the science squad a considerate amount of development. For some of them, it’s only a few minutes shoved in-between arcs, but their growth is visible throughout the rest of the show. I’ve said all I needed to say about Senku—he’s the heart of the show. He has a subdued personality; even admitting he prefers not to show much emotion, but the show always subtly clues us in to how he’s truly feeling. One of his pals, Kohaku, is entirely the opposite: She’s a spirited girl who takes no shit.On the other hand, his partner Chrome is another avid science fan, but he’s more relatable because he isn’t quite a super genius. He made a great deuteragonist, but I missed the original side characters Taiju and Yuzuihara. They’re a pleasant enough duo even though they’re only in a couple of episodes. I wish the story occasionally cut to their perspective. In the beginning, it’s exciting watching Senku and Taiju trying to survive in the stone age. In a life or death situation, they revive the strongest man they can find, Tsukasa. With his revival, the antagonist enters the show. I’ve seen people criticize Tsukasa and say he’s a weak villain, and I can’t help but disagree. His goal for the stone world is to give everyone equal opportunity; no one will pay taxes; no one will own anything in simpler terms, libertarianism. To achieve his dream for the stone world, he endeavors to kill every petrified adult. He wants only to revive the strongest youth he can find, or the “pure-hearted youth,” as he hypocritically calls them.The first arc is an action-packed battle of wits, hunting for food, running from lions, creating the cure for humanity, friends reunite after thousands of years, the goddamn world ends. It’s kind of epic. It’s entirely unlike the bulk of the story, which is fine. It was an unexpected but welcome change of pace. I came for the exhilarating premise; I stayed for Senku and his band of goofy science trailblazers. When watching Dr. Stone weekly, my biggest problem was the slow pacing of the main plotlines. After rewatching the entire show, the progression didn’t bother me as much. Even if it looks like the show forgot about your favorite character—don’t worry—they’ll be back.Dr. Stone thoughtfully uses reincorporation in its narrative to hint at future plot points, new characters and foreshadow meaningful twists. In one of the early episodes, someone mentioned a specific electronic he missed from the old world; as Senku progresses science, he reflects on that conversation nostalgically and endeavors to make that same electronic. It seemed so insignificant at first, yet it became a central plot point later on. One of my favorite characters, Gen, the magician, is subtly mentioned in a book long before being introduced. Another clue sprinkled throughout is the modern pop culture references, which contrast with the archaic society. There’s a pretty awesome in-story explanation for the villagers to use derivatives of modern Japanese. I have to give props to the writer for making someone from the stone age say “meme” without ruining the timeline.These small victories might not seem like much on their own, but together it shows great foresight from the author. Senku’s occasional unforeseen scientific solution comes to life satisfyingly—surprising both the audience and the other characters. Like any engaging twist, Senku’s science is never contrived; every twist left me in awe. I could always look back and see the clues the writer creatively laid out. If the writer weren’t just as brilliant as Senku, then he would not work. Thankfully, he is, and that’s why Senku’s a great protagonist. You could argue there’s a lot of unexplained science in this series. I’d say it’s not bad. There’s no concrete explanation for the stone epidemic, and that’s fine. I don’t know science. I know stories. As long as the science stays consistent with its own internal logic, I think it has succeeded, and Dr. Stone does.The humor is over-the-top but well-executed. It relies entirely on comedic timing and the presentation. Thankfully the editing in Dr. Stone is top-notch. Every part of the audiovisual production works in unison. The BGM, openings, and endings were all superb—this is the best soundtrack I’ve heard all year. Each background song is deftly synced up with scene transitions and set pieces. Jokes land with boisterous sound effects—absurd facial expressions pop-up on the screen, lined-up perfectly with the punchline. I understand why people have criticized the comedy for being idiotic. And they’re right. All of these characters are either idiots or socially inept. If you don’t like them, you’ll hate the comedy aspects. The jokes mainly rely on the character chemistry and, fantastic directing aside, I think they have hilarious chemistry. Other than the stellar character artwork (warning: some of the female faces are borderline Lovecraftian horrors), the backgrounds are consistently beautiful. TMS Entertainment continues to provide great still art; however, the longer the show went on, the more animation hiccups I noticed.Dr. Stone gets heavily scrutinized for its plot progression, pacing, and dumb characters. Some of the criticism is fair, but much of it underserved. I consider myself pretty critical, and I enjoyed this show way more than I thought I would. The amount of research put into the science blew me away. The way it entertained me while teaching me felt so nostalgic. I grew up on edutainment, like Bill Nye The Science Guy and Magic Schoolbus. This anime follows in their footsteps, but for an older audience.I never expected I would love these characters so much. I’m looking forward to their science shenanigans next season. It took humanity two million years to crawl out of the stone age to the modern era. Thankfully, it only took twenty-four weeks for people to realize Dr. Stone is a great anime.

[Update] Dr. Stone | voice from the stone pantip – NATAVIGUIDES

In truth, this show is about Senku: The prideful genius who makes it his job to help everyone through science. Senku is overconfident to a fault. He prides himself on being ten billion percent logical, and he likes to think he’ll always be right. Honestly, he makes his fair share of mistakes. He might be able to make a high-speed wagon in a couple of minutes, but don’t expect it not to fall apart the first time he rides it. Seeing the show from his perspective is fantastic. He’s not another overpowered blank-slate isekai protagonist who gets pushed through the story by coincidence. The story’s direction is unpredictable because Senku is a force of nature. His encyclopedic knowledge of science is his main advantage. He’s not invincible, he makes impactful decisions, and he makes mistakes. Much of the time, he has a utilitarian motive behind any of his kind actions. If he needs a lot of manpower, he baits villagers with ramen, with hard labor as their payment. It was always funny seeing the different ways he would trick people into doing what he wanted.

In this show, a life or death situation lies on whether or not Senku can create Coca-Cola from scratch. It does not attempt to hide how ridiculous it is. At the same time, it will also detail how to make cola with science. Once they have all parts of the latest science scheme working, we get a quick montage of it in action. He explains each scientific idea comprehensively before everyone begins working. It’s all said in simple terms so the audience can follow along. I’ll be honest; I don’t know much about science. I slept through biology, chemistry, and physics. Somehow Dr. Stone got me to love science. Senyu taught me science can solve every problem. Like all good edutainment programs, the teachings are seamlessly weaved into the story.

The main characters are so likable—not just for their personalities and chemistry—because they have personal goals and senses of humor. The writers make sure to give each member of the science squad a considerate amount of development. For some of them, it’s only a few minutes shoved in-between arcs, but their growth is visible throughout the rest of the show. I’ve said all I needed to say about Senku—he’s the heart of the show. He has a subdued personality; even admitting he prefers not to show much emotion, but the show always subtly clues us in to how he’s truly feeling. One of his pals, Kohaku, is entirely the opposite: She’s a spirited girl who takes no shit.

On the other hand, his partner Chrome is another avid science fan, but he’s more relatable because he isn’t quite a super genius. He made a great deuteragonist, but I missed the original side characters Taiju and Yuzuihara. They’re a pleasant enough duo even though they’re only in a couple of episodes. I wish the story occasionally cut to their perspective. In the beginning, it’s exciting watching Senku and Taiju trying to survive in the stone age. In a life or death situation, they revive the strongest man they can find, Tsukasa. With his revival, the antagonist enters the show. I’ve seen people criticize Tsukasa and say he’s a weak villain, and I can’t help but disagree. His goal for the stone world is to give everyone equal opportunity; no one will pay taxes; no one will own anything in simpler terms, libertarianism. To achieve his dream for the stone world, he endeavors to kill every petrified adult. He wants only to revive the strongest youth he can find, or the “pure-hearted youth,” as he hypocritically calls them.

The first arc is an action-packed battle of wits, hunting for food, running from lions, creating the cure for humanity, friends reunite after thousands of years, the goddamn world ends. It’s kind of epic. It’s entirely unlike the bulk of the story, which is fine. It was an unexpected but welcome change of pace. I came for the exhilarating premise; I stayed for Senku and his band of goofy science trailblazers. When watching Dr. Stone weekly, my biggest problem was the slow pacing of the main plotlines. After rewatching the entire show, the progression didn’t bother me as much. Even if it looks like the show forgot about your favorite character—don’t worry—they’ll be back.

Dr. Stone thoughtfully uses reincorporation in its narrative to hint at future plot points, new characters and foreshadow meaningful twists. In one of the early episodes, someone mentioned a specific electronic he missed from the old world; as Senku progresses science, he reflects on that conversation nostalgically and endeavors to make that same electronic. It seemed so insignificant at first, yet it became a central plot point later on. One of my favorite characters, Gen, the magician, is subtly mentioned in a book long before being introduced. Another clue sprinkled throughout is the modern pop culture references, which contrast with the archaic society. There’s a pretty awesome in-story explanation for the villagers to use derivatives of modern Japanese. I have to give props to the writer for making someone from the stone age say “meme” without ruining the timeline.

These small victories might not seem like much on their own, but together it shows great foresight from the author. Senku’s occasional unforeseen scientific solution comes to life satisfyingly—surprising both the audience and the other characters. Like any engaging twist, Senku’s science is never contrived; every twist left me in awe. I could always look back and see the clues the writer creatively laid out. If the writer weren’t just as brilliant as Senku, then he would not work. Thankfully, he is, and that’s why Senku’s a great protagonist. You could argue there’s a lot of unexplained science in this series. I’d say it’s not bad. There’s no concrete explanation for the stone epidemic, and that’s fine. I don’t know science. I know stories. As long as the science stays consistent with its own internal logic, I think it has succeeded, and Dr. Stone does.

The humor is over-the-top but well-executed. It relies entirely on comedic timing and the presentation. Thankfully the editing in Dr. Stone is top-notch. Every part of the audiovisual production works in unison. The BGM, openings, and endings were all superb—this is the best soundtrack I’ve heard all year. Each background song is deftly synced up with scene transitions and set pieces. Jokes land with boisterous sound effects—absurd facial expressions pop-up on the screen, lined-up perfectly with the punchline. I understand why people have criticized the comedy for being idiotic. And they’re right. All of these characters are either idiots or socially inept. If you don’t like them, you’ll hate the comedy aspects. The jokes mainly rely on the character chemistry and, fantastic directing aside, I think they have hilarious chemistry. Other than the stellar character artwork (warning: some of the female faces are borderline Lovecraftian horrors), the backgrounds are consistently beautiful. TMS Entertainment continues to provide great still art; however, the longer the show went on, the more animation hiccups I noticed.

Dr. Stone gets heavily scrutinized for its plot progression, pacing, and dumb characters. Some of the criticism is fair, but much of it underserved. I consider myself pretty critical, and I enjoyed this show way more than I thought I would. The amount of research put into the science blew me away. The way it entertained me while teaching me felt so nostalgic. I grew up on edutainment, like Bill Nye The Science Guy and Magic Schoolbus. This anime follows in their footsteps, but for an older audience.
I never expected I would love these characters so much. I’m looking forward to their science shenanigans next season. It took humanity two million years to crawl out of the stone age to the modern era. Thankfully, it only took twenty-four weeks for people to realize Dr. Stone is a great anime.

all, if you are expecting a grand story about reconstructing the 21st century within twenty-four episodes, you will be disappointed. I initially assumed this would be a dystopian action-adventure—it’s not; this is an edutainment comedy about science. I understand why this direction frustrated a lot of people. The trailers and promotional material were misleading. Unfortunately, this led to people harshly nitpicking it. It blows my mind that people have said the writing is shallow, without redeeming value and lacking focus. This series successfully uses an unreliable narrator; this gives it a sense of unpredictability. Anything can happen. It’s exhilarating. I’m not going to pretend like this anime is perfect, but it’s way better than some would lead you to believe.In truth, this show is about Senku: The prideful genius who makes it his job to help everyone through science. Senku is overconfident to a fault. He prides himself on being ten billion percent logical, and he likes to think he’ll always be right. Honestly, he makes his fair share of mistakes. He might be able to make a high-speed wagon in a couple of minutes, but don’t expect it not to fall apart the first time he rides it. Seeing the show from his perspective is fantastic. He’s not another overpowered blank-slate isekai protagonist who gets pushed through the story by coincidence. The story’s direction is unpredictable because Senku is a force of nature. His encyclopedic knowledge of science is his main advantage. He’s not invincible, he makes impactful decisions, and he makes mistakes. Much of the time, he has a utilitarian motive behind any of his kind actions. If he needs a lot of manpower, he baits villagers with ramen, with hard labor as their payment. It was always funny seeing the different ways he would trick people into doing what he wanted.In this show, a life or death situation lies on whether or not Senku can create Coca-Cola from scratch. It does not attempt to hide how ridiculous it is. At the same time, it will also detail how to make cola with science. Once they have all parts of the latest science scheme working, we get a quick montage of it in action. He explains each scientific idea comprehensively before everyone begins working. It’s all said in simple terms so the audience can follow along. I’ll be honest; I don’t know much about science. I slept through biology, chemistry, and physics. Somehow Dr. Stone got me to love science. Senyu taught me science can solve every problem. Like all good edutainment programs, the teachings are seamlessly weaved into the story.The main characters are so likable—not just for their personalities and chemistry—because they have personal goals and senses of humor. The writers make sure to give each member of the science squad a considerate amount of development. For some of them, it’s only a few minutes shoved in-between arcs, but their growth is visible throughout the rest of the show. I’ve said all I needed to say about Senku—he’s the heart of the show. He has a subdued personality; even admitting he prefers not to show much emotion, but the show always subtly clues us in to how he’s truly feeling. One of his pals, Kohaku, is entirely the opposite: She’s a spirited girl who takes no shit.On the other hand, his partner Chrome is another avid science fan, but he’s more relatable because he isn’t quite a super genius. He made a great deuteragonist, but I missed the original side characters Taiju and Yuzuihara. They’re a pleasant enough duo even though they’re only in a couple of episodes. I wish the story occasionally cut to their perspective. In the beginning, it’s exciting watching Senku and Taiju trying to survive in the stone age. In a life or death situation, they revive the strongest man they can find, Tsukasa. With his revival, the antagonist enters the show. I’ve seen people criticize Tsukasa and say he’s a weak villain, and I can’t help but disagree. His goal for the stone world is to give everyone equal opportunity; no one will pay taxes; no one will own anything in simpler terms, libertarianism. To achieve his dream for the stone world, he endeavors to kill every petrified adult. He wants only to revive the strongest youth he can find, or the “pure-hearted youth,” as he hypocritically calls them.The first arc is an action-packed battle of wits, hunting for food, running from lions, creating the cure for humanity, friends reunite after thousands of years, the goddamn world ends. It’s kind of epic. It’s entirely unlike the bulk of the story, which is fine. It was an unexpected but welcome change of pace. I came for the exhilarating premise; I stayed for Senku and his band of goofy science trailblazers. When watching Dr. Stone weekly, my biggest problem was the slow pacing of the main plotlines. After rewatching the entire show, the progression didn’t bother me as much. Even if it looks like the show forgot about your favorite character—don’t worry—they’ll be back.Dr. Stone thoughtfully uses reincorporation in its narrative to hint at future plot points, new characters and foreshadow meaningful twists. In one of the early episodes, someone mentioned a specific electronic he missed from the old world; as Senku progresses science, he reflects on that conversation nostalgically and endeavors to make that same electronic. It seemed so insignificant at first, yet it became a central plot point later on. One of my favorite characters, Gen, the magician, is subtly mentioned in a book long before being introduced. Another clue sprinkled throughout is the modern pop culture references, which contrast with the archaic society. There’s a pretty awesome in-story explanation for the villagers to use derivatives of modern Japanese. I have to give props to the writer for making someone from the stone age say “meme” without ruining the timeline.These small victories might not seem like much on their own, but together it shows great foresight from the author. Senku’s occasional unforeseen scientific solution comes to life satisfyingly—surprising both the audience and the other characters. Like any engaging twist, Senku’s science is never contrived; every twist left me in awe. I could always look back and see the clues the writer creatively laid out. If the writer weren’t just as brilliant as Senku, then he would not work. Thankfully, he is, and that’s why Senku’s a great protagonist. You could argue there’s a lot of unexplained science in this series. I’d say it’s not bad. There’s no concrete explanation for the stone epidemic, and that’s fine. I don’t know science. I know stories. As long as the science stays consistent with its own internal logic, I think it has succeeded, and Dr. Stone does.The humor is over-the-top but well-executed. It relies entirely on comedic timing and the presentation. Thankfully the editing in Dr. Stone is top-notch. Every part of the audiovisual production works in unison. The BGM, openings, and endings were all superb—this is the best soundtrack I’ve heard all year. Each background song is deftly synced up with scene transitions and set pieces. Jokes land with boisterous sound effects—absurd facial expressions pop-up on the screen, lined-up perfectly with the punchline. I understand why people have criticized the comedy for being idiotic. And they’re right. All of these characters are either idiots or socially inept. If you don’t like them, you’ll hate the comedy aspects. The jokes mainly rely on the character chemistry and, fantastic directing aside, I think they have hilarious chemistry. Other than the stellar character artwork (warning: some of the female faces are borderline Lovecraftian horrors), the backgrounds are consistently beautiful. TMS Entertainment continues to provide great still art; however, the longer the show went on, the more animation hiccups I noticed.Dr. Stone gets heavily scrutinized for its plot progression, pacing, and dumb characters. Some of the criticism is fair, but much of it underserved. I consider myself pretty critical, and I enjoyed this show way more than I thought I would. The amount of research put into the science blew me away. The way it entertained me while teaching me felt so nostalgic. I grew up on edutainment, like Bill Nye The Science Guy and Magic Schoolbus. This anime follows in their footsteps, but for an older audience.I never expected I would love these characters so much. I’m looking forward to their science shenanigans next season. It took humanity two million years to crawl out of the stone age to the modern era. Thankfully, it only took twenty-four weeks for people to realize Dr. Stone is a great anime.


10 Dark Web Videos You Should Never Watch


INSTAGRAM: http://bit.ly/ChillsInstagram
➡️MY MUSIC VIDEO: https://youtu.be/zV9URU86Pe8
TWITTER: http://bit.ly/ChillsTwitter
FACEBOOK: http://bit.ly/ChillsFacebook
REDDIT: http://bit.ly/ChillsReddit
Subscribe Here: http://bit.ly/ChillsYouTube
In this top 10 list, we look at videos from the dark web that are too scary to watch. Whether they’re real or fake, let me know your thoughts in the comments below. Enjoy my analysis of these videos.
Sources:
10.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MzGERlkgt0g
9.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nLrTnBwoP0
8.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7K5ladrij6U
7.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuLqd6CrwuI
6.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7n751Hco7o0
5.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dbjMyROjyX0
https://youtu.be/9jCHWDW82Pw
4.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FH3R9tslY
3.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwXX_zilxdU
2.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IelAk6p1ZAs
1.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5isw_rq7kNo
https://youtu.be/1CwF2b94Q5w
Narrated by: Chills
Written by: Kyler Richman
Edited by: Huba Áron Csapó
Music:
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
jdgehlert (pond5.com)

นอกจากการดูบทความนี้แล้ว คุณยังสามารถดูข้อมูลที่เป็นประโยชน์อื่นๆ อีกมากมายที่เราให้ไว้ที่นี่: ดูเพิ่มเติม

10 Dark Web Videos You Should Never Watch

เมื่อพี่เลี้ยงเด็ก ต้องมาเจอกับ… [ สปอยหนัง ] Voice from the Stone (2017)


▷▷ Fanpage http://shorturl.at/bemGJ ◁◁
▷▷ Youtube http://shorturl.at/cjtOW ◁◁
▷▷▷▷▷▷ ขอบคุณที่รับชมครับ ◁◁◁◁◁◁

▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ ช่องทางการ Donate ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇
▇ ผ่าน True Wallet (ไม่มีค่าธรรมเนียม) ► 0866617965 ▇
▇ ผ่าน พร้อมเพย์ (ไม่มีค่าธรรมเนียม) ► 0866617965 ▇
▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇
ChampStudio ,สปอยหนัง ,สรุปเนื้อเรื่อง ,สรุปหนัง ,สปอยหนังเก่า ,สปอยยับ ,เล่าหนัง ,หนังเก่า ,Netflix ,2017 ,เสียงเพรียกจากกําแพงหิน ,VoiceFromTheStone

เมื่อพี่เลี้ยงเด็ก ต้องมาเจอกับ... [ สปอยหนัง ] Voice from the Stone (2017)

Voice from the Stone Official Trailer 1 (2017) – Emilia Clarke Movie


Starring: Emilia Clarke, Marton Csokas, Caterina Murino
Voice from the Stone Official Trailer 1 (2017) Emilia Clarke Movie
Set in 1950s Tuscany, Voice from the Stone is the haunting and suspenseful story of Verena, a solemn nurse drawn to aid a young boy who has fallen silent since the sudden passing of his mother.
Subscribe to INDIE \u0026 FILM FESTIVALS: http://bit.ly/1wbkfYg
Subscribe to TRAILERS: http://bit.ly/sxaw6h
Subscribe to COMING SOON: http://bit.ly/H2vZUn
We’re on SNAPCHAT: http://bit.ly/2cOzfcy
Like us on FACEBOOK: http://bit.ly/1QyRMsE
Follow us on TWITTER: http://bit.ly/1ghOWmt
You’re quite the artsy one, aren’t you? Fandango MOVIECLIPS FILM FESTIVALS \u0026 INDIE TRAILERS is the destination for…well, all things related to Film Festivals \u0026 Indie Films. If you want to keep up with the latest festival news, art house openings, indie movie content, film reviews, and so much more, then you have found the right channel.

Voice from the Stone Official Trailer 1 (2017) - Emilia Clarke Movie

VOICE FROM THE STONE Official Trailer (2017) Emilia Clarke Thriller Movie HD


VOICE FROM THE STONE Official Trailer (2017) Emilia Clarke Thriller Movie HD. Let us know what you think in the comments below!
VOICE FROM THE STONE is the movie by Eric D. Howell.
PLOT: Set in 1950s Tuscany, Voice from the Stone is the haunting and suspenseful story of Verena, a solemn nurse drawn to aid a young boy who has fallen silent since the sudden passing of his mother.
RELEASE DATE: 28 April 2017 (USA)
GENRE: Drama, Mystery, Thriller
CAST: Emilia Clarke, Marton Csokas, Caterina Murino
The JoBlo YouTube Network covers all the latest movie trailers, movie clips, TV trailers, hottie clips, TV spots, videogame trailers and so much more!
SUBSCRIBE for more Movie Trailers HERE: https://goo.gl/Yr3O86
Check out all of the JOBLO YOUTUBE channels:
MOVIE TRAILERS: https://bit.ly/1GUxgxm
MOVIE CLIPS: https://bit.ly/31ByDAf
TV TRAILERS: https://bit.ly/2rgxfot
SUPERHEROES: https://bit.ly/2W1GS7r
ANIMATED: https://bit.ly/2Jd1moq
HORROR: https://bit.ly/2p5YhzR
ORIGINAL CONTENT VIDEOS: https://bit.ly/2MCQJh4
CELEBRITY INTERVIEWS: https://bit.ly/2W0EeyK
VoiceFromTheStone Trailer EmiliaClarke

VOICE FROM THE STONE Official Trailer (2017) Emilia Clarke Thriller Movie HD

V-project@進擊的巨人話劇


Comic World香港 37
09022014

V-project@進擊的巨人話劇

นอกจากการดูบทความนี้แล้ว คุณยังสามารถดูข้อมูลที่เป็นประโยชน์อื่นๆ อีกมากมายที่เราให้ไว้ที่นี่: ดูบทความเพิ่มเติมในหมวดหมู่LEARN FOREIGN LANGUAGE

ขอบคุณที่รับชมกระทู้ครับ voice from the stone pantip

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *