Go, Go, Loser Ranger! (often called Ranger Reject by fans) is shaping up to be one of 2024’s most popular new anime. The manga version, written and illustrated by The Quintessential Quintuplets creator Negi Haruba, debuted in Weekly Shōnen Magazine in February 2021 and has quickly generated a massive and vocal following. One of the best things about the series is how it takes tokusatsu show tropes, especially ones found in Kamen Rider, Super Sentai, and their American-equivalent Power Rangers, and flips them on their head, presenting a warped inversion of the story fans have come to expect. This subversive nature is apparent in every facet of the series, as it is packed with callbacks and references to classic tokusatsu media, all of which help the viewers understand more about the world.Go, Go, Loser Ranger! is set in a world where, thirteen years previously, an army of evil alien monsters had invaded Earth. However, this war went terribly for the aliens, as their leaders were all wiped out in a year thanks to the mighty Dragon Keepers and their magical weapons, called the Divine Tools. However, the Dragon Keepers made a deal with the Dusters, the footsoldiers of the alien army. They would be allowed to live on the condition that they took part in a fake battle every Sunday, allowing the Dragon Keepers to convince the public that the war was ongoing and that the Dragon Keepers were hard at work. However, one of the Dusters, Fighter D, gets tired of this and decides that he is going to try and join the Ranger Force and infiltrate the organization from the inside, hoping he can get close to the Dragon Keepers and finally kill them. But this plan is much easier said than done.D also calls back to another Shotaro Ishinomori creation, Skull Man. The character first appeared in the manga of the same name, which ran in Weekly Shonen Magazine in 1970. The manga sees Japan wracked by a raft of murders perpetrated by the mysterious Skull Man and his shapeshifting partner Garo, forcing the Tachiki Detective Agency and young man Tatsuo Kagura to hit the streets and get to the bottom of the crime wave. However, this relationship soon turns sour when it is revealed that Tatsuo is actually the Skull Man and that he is trying to discover the truth about a conspiracy that’s been following him for years. Unlike many leads of the era, Skull Man is an anti-hero, doing horrible things to get his way and being more than willing to kill those who try to stop him while also being a tragic character.
Go, Go, Loser Ranger! (often called Ranger Reject by fans) is shaping up to be one of 2024’s most popular new anime. The manga version, written and illustrated by The Quintessential Quintuplets creator Negi Haruba, debuted in Weekly Shōnen Magazine in February 2021 and has quickly generated a massive and vocal following. One of the best things about the series is how it takes tokusatsu show tropes, especially ones found in Kamen Rider, Super Sentai, and their American-equivalent Power Rangers, and flips them on their head, presenting a warped inversion of the story fans have come to expect. This subversive nature is apparent in every facet of the series, as it is packed with callbacks and references to classic tokusatsu media, all of which help the viewers understand more about the world.
Go, Go, Loser Ranger! is set in a world where, thirteen years previously, an army of evil alien monsters had invaded Earth. However, this war went terribly for the aliens, as their leaders were all wiped out in a year thanks to the mighty Dragon Keepers and their magical weapons, called the Divine Tools. However, the Dragon Keepers made a deal with the Dusters, the footsoldiers of the alien army. They would be allowed to live on the condition that they took part in a fake battle every Sunday, allowing the Dragon Keepers to convince the public that the war was ongoing and that the Dragon Keepers were hard at work. However, one of the Dusters, Fighter D, gets tired of this and decides that he is going to try and join the Ranger Force and infiltrate the organization from the inside, hoping he can get close to the Dragon Keepers and finally kill them. But this plan is much easier said than done.
D also calls back to another Shotaro Ishinomori creation, Skull Man. The character first appeared in the manga of the same name, which ran in Weekly Shonen Magazine in 1970. The manga sees Japan wracked by a raft of murders perpetrated by the mysterious Skull Man and his shapeshifting partner Garo, forcing the Tachiki Detective Agency and young man Tatsuo Kagura to hit the streets and get to the bottom of the crime wave. However, this relationship soon turns sour when it is revealed that Tatsuo is actually the Skull Man and that he is trying to discover the truth about a conspiracy that’s been following him for years. Unlike many leads of the era, Skull Man is an anti-hero, doing horrible things to get his way and being more than willing to kill those who try to stop him while also being a tragic character.
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