10 Lessons Other Anime Can Learn From Solo Leveling

Solo Leveling is an anime that has quickly gotten the anime community in a chokehold. It’s pretty obvious as to why. It started as a web novel before becoming an incredibly successful WebToon. After its success made it an obvious slam dunk, Crunchyroll pushed for the anime, and it was hotly anticipated for very good reason. From its dynamic artwork, rocking soundtrack, interesting world, and so much more, the series has managed to make an incredible impact in the short amount of time its anime has existed. It basically became a gateway series to get more people into Korean WebToons.Of course, an anime that makes such a big splash is bound to be doing something right. It may, at first, seem to have the trappings of an isekai or a shōnen, but it is something far more complex and different. As opposed to being genre-defining, it’s genre-defying. While parts of it call to mind series like Attack on Titan, Goblin Slayer, or other similarly bleakly realistic shows, it also isn’t neatly recognizable as something that fits into those molds either. There is a lot that anime of all genres could learn from Solo Leveling — lessons that can help increase their stats.Jin-Woo Sung is, however, in a static system. In Solo Leveling, the Hunters, people with supernatural abilities, awaken into their powers and those powers will stay at that level forever. If you’re born weak, you stay weak. That is the rule. No exceptions up until Jin-Woo becomes a Player, capable of improving his skills and stats like in a video game but in his real world. The system for Jin-Woo is separate from that of the world around him now and that is interesting. Anime could use some more hard and fast rules that it is willing to break for the sake of a story.

Solo Leveling is an anime that has quickly gotten the anime community in a chokehold. It’s pretty obvious as to why. It started as a web novel before becoming an incredibly successful WebToon. After its success made it an obvious slam dunk, Crunchyroll pushed for the anime, and it was hotly anticipated for very good reason. From its dynamic artwork, rocking soundtrack, interesting world, and so much more, the series has managed to make an incredible impact in the short amount of time its anime has existed. It basically became a gateway series to get more people into Korean WebToons.

Of course, an anime that makes such a big splash is bound to be doing something right. It may, at first, seem to have the trappings of an isekai or a shōnen, but it is something far more complex and different. As opposed to being genre-defining, it’s genre-defying. While parts of it call to mind series like Attack on Titan, Goblin Slayer, or other similarly bleakly realistic shows, it also isn’t neatly recognizable as something that fits into those molds either. There is a lot that anime of all genres could learn from Solo Leveling — lessons that can help increase their stats.

Jin-Woo Sung is, however, in a static system. In Solo Leveling, the Hunters, people with supernatural abilities, awaken into their powers and those powers will stay at that level forever. If you’re born weak, you stay weak. That is the rule. No exceptions up until Jin-Woo becomes a Player, capable of improving his skills and stats like in a video game but in his real world. The system for Jin-Woo is separate from that of the world around him now and that is interesting. Anime could use some more hard and fast rules that it is willing to break for the sake of a story.

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