Osamake Author Was Disappointed With Anime

2024-03-29
Osamake Author Was Disappointed With Anime

The author of the light novels "Osamake: Romcom Where The Childhood Friend Won't Lose", Shuichi Nimaru, has expressed his deep disappointment with the anime adaptation of his work released in Spring-2021 (April-June) and produced by Doga Kobo studios. Nimaru shared his displeasure via Twitter, revealing that his experience with the animated series caused him great personal suffering.

Osamake Author Was Disappointed With Anime

In his message on the social network, Nimaru admitted that he was only able to watch the first two episodes of the anime before feeling desperate and unfollowing the series. Although he tried to continue seeing it with the support of friends, he was again forced to abandon it due to the disappointment it caused him. This experience had a profound impact on the author, who confessed to having been in shock for six months, facing difficulties in resuming his creative work and immersed in alcohol consumption.

The anime adaptation of "Osamake" also had an impact on the sales of the original light novels. While the first volume had experienced remarkable success with 19 reprints in 22 months, sales stagnated following the anime's release, with zero reprints even three years after its adaptation.

Nimaru explained that the disappointment stemmed from the disparity between his original vision of the story and the interpretation made by the anime's production team. The author was frustrated to see how key elements of his work were altered or misrepresented in the animated adaptation, which affected his emotional connection to the project.

Despite the challenges and emotional damage caused by this experience, Nimaru was committed to moving forward and improving her work. He expressed his determination to continue writing and complete his work in the hope of overcoming this disappointment and regaining the success he had achieved with the original light novels.

Osamake Author Was Disappointed With Anime

And of course, his revelation did not go without comment:

  • "How can you be so unfaithful to the source material without adding original content in the anime?"
  • "A romantic comedy about a childhood friend who never loses? I haven't seen it, but was it that bad?"
  • "Except for the break dancing at the cultural festival, the designs weren't too bad. The biggest problem is that I couldn't understand the content despite it being a romantic comedy. I thought it was going to be like a normal romantic comedy, but then the repentant encounter started as if it were a set-up."
  • "Even if the anime was bullshit from the author's point of view. The fact that it had so many reprints means that the people who read it enjoyed it. The anime was made by a group of people who were in the same boat as the author, and they enjoyed it. You were slandered by Doga Kobo's followers, who said you were only making cuts because the original work was shit. It's the Committee's fault for allowing it to air with such poor performance, even though they put so much effort into promoting the original work."
  • "Is it possible to stop buying the original novels just because you didn't like the adaptation?"
  • "It seems that the original author interfered with the script and storyboards, but what went wrong? The animation? The designs?"
  • "I think they didn't have enough time to improve the animation. It usually happens when the original author intrudes and the animation falls apart."
  • "I'm glad you can blame anime when your work stagnates and gets boring."
  • "Anime adaptation is a gamble in these cases."

Source: Yaraon!