Jujutsu Kaisen: The Culling Game Is Better Than I Dreamed

Warning: The following contains minor spoilers for Jujutsu Kaisen: The Culling Game – Part 1, now streaming on Crunchyroll.

When it comes to classic, beloved shonen, there are certain… barriers to entry, though nothing that should detract from their enduring legacy. It’s the “little” things, like the number of episodes, pacing, and production quality – factors that stem from a time when shonen were produced very differently. There were no seasons; they would just run continuously until they ran out of material to adapt, at which time they’d either go on hiatus or burn more of the midnight oil (that’s the whimsical way of saying overwork), producing filler arcs until there were enough chapters. Additionally, the evolving production quality meant that shows looked very different in Episode 1 than compared to Episode 200 or so, which could also deter anyone who is first and foremost drawn to the later art quality of a long-running show.

Of course, shonen has changed quite a bit since the 90s or the 2000s. If anything, sometimes it feels like you’re at greater risk of the animation quality going down after the first season, though this is thankfully rare. One-Punch Man never achieved the same level of attention in the cultural zeitgeist after Season 1, a decline most would attribute to the dwindling animation quality after the anime changed hands. Or, to a much less egregious degree, take My Hero Academia, a show whose detractors would assert that it declined in quality after Season 3. Personally, I think this is just because its early seasons set a gold standard for what a long-running shonen could look like – one that was unfortunately hard to maintain to quite the same level. Regardless, it was still a fairly consistent and wonderfully written series, and one that especially stepped up during its final seasons (though I’m obviously a bit biased on that count).

I bring all of this up because now we have Jujutsu Kaisen, and although it is by no means new (having started airing in 2020), I’ve only recently come to realize just how much I love – and have loved – this series. Season 1 already started strong, from narrative to animation and especially music, but I’m not sure I’ve seen an anime so consistently increase in quality each season – at least not that I can think of off the top of my head. I’m too busy thinking about The Culling Game – Part 1, the long-awaited third season that has officially cemented Jujutsu Kaisen as not only one of my favorite shonen, but one of my favorite anime, period.

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“Perfect Preparation”: Jujutsu Kaisen Serving C***

Warning: The following contains spoilers for Jujutsu Kaisen, Episode 51, “Perfect Preparation”, now streaming on Crunchyroll.

Late last year, I wrote about Gachiakuta and how refreshing it felt as an anime-only to go into a new series from my favorite studio with the manga’s first three volumes fresh in my memory. It felt cool to experience what manga readers must go through every time a new adaptation comes out, and judging its early episodes with some added context/authority offered some nuance to my time with it that I wasn’t used to. Now, unfortunately, the anime quickly outpaced what I was able to read in the manga, mostly because no bookstore around me had Volume 4 for some reason. Thankfully, just a few months later, I would be subject to an even greater catharsis as Jujutsu Kaisen: The Culling Game Part 1 began airing.

With Gachiakuta, it was something new to me, and whether I was reading it or watching it, I hadn’t fully decided if I liked it or not yet. With Jujutsu Kaisen, on the other hand, I had already read the manga to completion last year while waiting for the show to return, which was certainly an experience to say the least. And for all the insane battles, cool characters (both wasted and not), and the at-times cumbersome culmination of the series intricate magic system, there was really only one arc that I was desperately hungry for above all the others… The Perfect Preparation Arc. In other words, the moment Maki became the coolest character.

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