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Ghost of Yotei becomes first open-world game to add Lo-fi mode for immersive exploration
Ghost of Yotei becomes first open-world game to add Lo-fi mode for immersive exploration

Express Tribune

time11-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Express Tribune

Ghost of Yotei becomes first open-world game to add Lo-fi mode for immersive exploration

Ghost of Yotei has revealed a new Lo-fi mode during its State of Play presentation, expanding on its Kurosawa Mode from Ghost of Tsushima while adding fresh creative features. Kurosawa Mode returns, transforming the experience with monochromatic visuals in honour of the filmmaker, but Sucker Punch Productions has introduced two additional modes for the sequel. Japanese filmmaker Takashi Miike is honoured with Miiko Mode, which brings the camera closer during combat and enhances blood and mud effects, intensifying the experience. 'Toggling Miiko Mode on brings the camera closer during combat to ratchet up the intensity.' The third mode, honouring Cowboy Bebop director Shinichirō Watanabe, introduces Lo-fi music to the game. 'While playing with this unique mode active, Lo-fi music, including new tracks made by Watanabe himself, will complement our every action as we stroll through the lands of Ezo.' The Lo-fi mode pairs new tracks with exploration, enhancing the game's sense of atmosphere while maintaining Ghost of Tsushima's prioritisation of environmental design and calm moments within its world. Ghost of Yotei appears set to continue the tradition of providing the sense of zen fans felt exploring in Ghost of Tsushima, creating a deeply immersive experience for players in its recreation of 1200s Japan.

‘Lazarus' Is a Briefly Gorgeous Anime That Vibes Hard But Can't Outpace Its Own Silence
‘Lazarus' Is a Briefly Gorgeous Anime That Vibes Hard But Can't Outpace Its Own Silence

Gizmodo

time30-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Gizmodo

‘Lazarus' Is a Briefly Gorgeous Anime That Vibes Hard But Can't Outpace Its Own Silence

When Adult Swim first announced that it was working with director Shinichirō Watanabe, Jujutsu Kaisen studio Mappa, and John Wick director Chad Stahelski on a new anime project, Lazarus already had the cards stacked against it. In the rollout of its stylish and musical trailers, the anime hewed close to Watanabe's Cowboy Bebop aesthetics, setting it up to live up to a standard from a bygone era of animation that it would never be able to satisfy audiences with, and never tried to. Set in 2052, Lazarus imagines a near future world lulled into euphoric peace by Hapna—a wonder drug that erases all physical and emotional pain. But three years after its global adoption, its elusive creator, Dr. Skinner, resurfaces with a grim truth: the miracle cure will become lethal within 30 days unless he is found. With the countdown to extinction ticking, a ragtag team of outlaws is assembled under the Lazarus task force to track him down and save humanity from self-inflicted doom. Despite its setup as a globe-trotting mystery fueled by red herrings and dramatic intrigue, Lazarus quickly settles into a rhythm that feels more like watching pins drop on a GPS than experiencing a suspenseful manhunt. After the premiere, plot twists arrive with uncanny timing but land without weight, and emotional payoffs barely register. Efforts to deepen the ensemble fall flat—most characters remain tethered to their archetypes, with only fleeting early-episode monologues offering glimpses of humanity before the urgency of the endgame takes over. By its final stretch, the anime veers from meditative to messy. A last-ditch assassin showdown featuring its free-running lead, Axel Gilberto (a clear nod to the Spike Spiegel archetype), tries to spark momentum, but its climax lands more frantic than fulfilling. Key revelations arrive not through its protagonists, but via side characters delivering exposition that sidelines the main cast, leaving them adrift in their own narrative. Lazarus isn't without its flashes of brilliance. When it slows down (which it often does), detaching from the mission's ticking clock, the series finds a comfy rhythm set to lo-fi beats and paired with lush animation that lets characters breathe. Whether drifting across the ocean or crashing influencer raves as the world quietly crumbles, these reflective interludes elevate the vibe. And when action kicks in, it's a visual feast tricked out in fluidity and weight and choreographed with precision, reminding viewers what Watanabe and Mappa can still do when the mood and momentum align. Watanabe's towering legacy casts a long shadow—and for Lazarus, that proved more of a burden than a blessing. It was never built to be another Cowboy Bebop, yet Adult Swim's nostalgia-heavy marketing framed it as such, fueling expectations the show never intended to meet. Instead of pushing boundaries, Lazarus finds itself caught in the machinery of modern anime production—forced to swap introspection for momentum and nuance for scope—ultimately hoisting itself by the weight of comparisons it didn't ask for. Watanabe told io9 that comparisons to Bebop were never his intent. His original pitch was closer in spirit to Space Dandy. But when Adult Swim requested a more serious tone, that evolution led to Lazarus. From there, the deck was stacked. Each week, it became harder to ignore how the weight of Bebop-sized expectations left little room for the show to stand on its own merits. Pacing issues aside, for fans who only see Watanabe through the lens of Bebop, Lazarus was never going to satisfy. One of the most significant strikes against it was simply structural: it's a modern anime confined to just 13 episodes, worlds away from the breathing room Cowboy Bebop had across its 26-episode run. In today's landscape, original anime rarely get the luxury of extended runtimes—unless they're backed by a hefty source material that justifies a two-cour rollout. That doesn't excuse Lazarus' clunky finale, but it does help explain how it ended up rushing to the finish line the way it did. The comparison was unfair from the start. There's still something undeniably admirable in Lazarus. Like André 3000 trading rap verses for flute solos, Watanabe isn't chasing the ghost of Cowboy Bebop here. Yes, the show carries echoes of his signature style—jazzy undertones, tight choreography, a cool cast—but this time, he's riffing in a different register. Lazarus doesn't aim for spacefaring spectacle; it leans into post-covid introspection, using stillness where others sprint. If nothing else, it plays like a love letter to a lost era of anime—much like Netflix's Pluto—when creators with decades in the game could still imprint singular, prescient, inimitable vibes. Filtered through MAPPA's modern polish, it's less a revival than a requiem. Maybe Lazarus plays more like the B-sides of Watanabe's discography—echoing the rhythms of Bebop, Samurai Champloo, and Space Dandy without pushing into new territory. It doesn't stand shoulder to shoulder with those genre-defining hits but settles instead into the quieter company of Carole & Tuesday and Terror in Resonance—less a reinvention, more a reflective coda. While its legacy may align more with Watanabe's quieter works, Lazarus is far from disposable. It's a brief but intentional canvas—one where a storied creator pauses to reflect amid an industry sprinting toward spectacle. In an era obsessed with instant payoffs, it dares to linger in mood and meaning, wrapping wellness paranoia in slick choreography and a soundtrack that hits harder than the plot ever endeavors to. Lazarus is streaming on HBO Max. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

‘Lazarus' Creator Shinichirō Watanabe On Modernizing His Action Anime Series & Teases Upcoming 'Ghost Story'
‘Lazarus' Creator Shinichirō Watanabe On Modernizing His Action Anime Series & Teases Upcoming 'Ghost Story'

Yahoo

time21-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

‘Lazarus' Creator Shinichirō Watanabe On Modernizing His Action Anime Series & Teases Upcoming 'Ghost Story'

In Adult Swim's Lazarus, the latest anime action series from Cowboy Bebop creator Shinichirō Watanabe, one man aims to free the world of pain at a catastrophic price. The year is 2052 when an era of peace and unbridled indulgence reigns supreme. The reason for this? Humankind has been freed from sickness and pain after a Nobel Prize-winning neuroscientist, Dr. Skinner, invented a miracle cure-all drug with no apparent side effects called Hapuna. However, after society grows an unhealthy dependence on the pills, Dr. Skinner vanishes. Three years later, Dr. Skinner returns only to bring a message of doom. He announces that Hapuna, while vital to those hooked on it, has a short half-life, and everyone who has taken it will die in approximately thirty days since its release. A group of ragtag individuals forms a task force to locate Dr. Skinner and persuade him to develop a vaccine at the risk of humanity's impending global extinction. More from Deadline 'Legend of Mecha Scholars' Gets Global Distribution In Ad Astra, DRock Cultural Exchange Initiative 2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More 'Big Mouth' Creator Nick Kroll On Animating Puberty & Destigmatizing The Experience: "It's All Weird And It's All Normal" Here, Watanabe speaks to Deadline about the creation of the series. DEADLINE: SHINICHIRŌ WATANABE: I always wanted to make an anime like 007 or Mission: Impossible. The reason our project kicked off was because I got an offer from Cartoon Network. The inspiration for Lazarus specifically came from watching foreign news, where the topic often revolved around the opioid crisis. I thought that this isn't something that's really covered or touched upon in action movies. So, I thought it would be a great topic. Opioids are not illegal; you can get a legal prescription for some of them, but people will still get addicted to them, and people do die from them. I thought that maybe you could make a drug that would be similar in the way that it would be like an opioid but also designed to kill people in a certain amount of years. Whenever I talk about this, people ask if this is a metaphor for the opioid crisis, but it is not really like that. This is just media and entertainment, and it's set in the future, so it's nothing like that. DEADLINE: John Wick WATANABE: It's been a while since I've made an action anime—about roughly 20 years, to be exact. So, I can't just make the same type of action anime I made before. I needed to modernize. So, the best person to reach was Chad. DEADLINE: WATANABE: In the past, anime production budgets were very low, so there wasn't much wiggle room for what we could actually make. There was no way we would have been able to call on Chad's team in the past due to budget constraints. Now, while the budgets are bigger, there's a lot more we can do, and there's a lot of work that needs to be done, but there aren't enough people in the industry to get the work done. We can't just add more people willy-nilly; the animators are artisans and craftspeople, so they take a long time to train. That's the reason we have a shortage now. This goes to directors, too. They take a lot of time to train and a lot of skills and experience to have a good director direct a series. DEADLINE:Lazarus? WATANABE: There are a lot of themes. But the biggest one is pain. Dr. Skinner does say in the beginning that not feeling pain is the same as dying, and for him, it's a question of whether pain should be moved completely, both physically and mentally. DEADLINE: WATANABE: I'd like to make a series based on a ghost story in the future. I've been consuming a lot of ghost-related media lately—specifically, movies where evil ghosts make an appearance. Oh, and I recently watched The Exorcist. [This interview was conducted through an interpreter add has been edited for length and clarity.] Best of Deadline 'Poker Face' Season 2 Guest Stars: From Katie Holmes To Simon Hellberg The 25 Highest-Grossing Animated Films Of All Time At The Global Box Office The Movies That Have Made More Than $1 Billion At The Global Box Office

5 anime that left a lasting impact with just one season
5 anime that left a lasting impact with just one season

Time of India

time04-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

5 anime that left a lasting impact with just one season

There is a certain allure to anime that tells its tale in a single season, even in a medium where lengthy series frequently take center stage. Despite their brief running times, these programs are able to hold viewers' attention with gripping stories, endearing characters, and powerful concepts. Whatever the cause of the brief existence, several of these anime only lasted one season but were nevertheless well-liked by viewers. Today, let's examine five of those. 5 anime with just one season Cowboy Bebop - Crunchyroll Sunrise produced and animated it under the direction of a production team known as Hajime Yatate, which consists of director Shinichirō Watanabe, scriptwriter Keiko Nobumoto, character designer Toshihiro Kawamoto, mechanical designer Kimitoshi Yamane, and composer Yoko Kanno. The 26-episode series, which is set in 2071, centers on the life of a roaming bounty-hunting crew on board the Bebop starship. Death Parade - Crunchyroll Death Parade is a psychological thriller anime series produced by Madhouse and written, directed, and produced by Yuzuru Tachikawa in Japan. In Death Parade, Decim, an enigmatic bartender and arbitrator at the Quindecim bar where people who pass away simultaneously are sent to decide their fate, is the protagonist. Hellsing Ultimate - Crunchyroll I'm still pissed off for how Walter was turned evil in Hellsing Ultimate Since its premiere in early 2006, Hellsing Ultimate has been one of the greatest vampire anime to ever appear on television. Ten episodes, each lasting at least forty minutes, comprised Hellsing Ultimate's 2014 finale. These episodes told a gruesome and captivatingly sinister tale of humanity and what it really means to be a monster. Parasyte: The Maxim - Crunchyroll I love Parasyte The Maxim but I don't know anyone else who has seen this magnificent series. In 2014 and 2015, Japan released two live-action adaptations of the manga. Madhouse's adaptation of the anime television series, Parasyte-the maxim, ran in Japan from October 2014 to March 2015. The series centers on Shinichi Izumi, a senior in high school, who is the target of a parasitic organism's unsuccessful attempt to take over his brain. Samurai Champloo - Crunchyroll The Japanese historical adventure anime Samurai Champloo was released in 2004. Hip hop and other anachronistic cultural allusions are mixed with traditional aspects in the series' fictitious depiction of Edo era Japan. The show chronicles the adventures of Ronin Jin, a vagabond outlaw, and tea waitress Fuu. These one-season anime gems deserve a spot on your watchlist, so what are you waiting for? Start streaming them today!

Lazarus, the new anime from the creator of Cowboy Bebop, premieres April 5
Lazarus, the new anime from the creator of Cowboy Bebop, premieres April 5

Yahoo

time27-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Lazarus, the new anime from the creator of Cowboy Bebop, premieres April 5

Adult Swim announced that it would air the next anime from Shinichirō Watanabe, the creator of Cowboy Bebop, way back in 2023, and as of today, we finally have a release date. Lazarus is set to premiere on April 5 at midnight on Adult Swim, and will be available to stream on Max the day after. Lazarus follows a task force of agents, also called Lazarus, who are hunting a mad scientist that developed a miracle drug called "Hapna." The drug was created to be a painkiller, but was also secretly designed to kill whoever takes it, three years after it's first taken. Lazarus are trying to find the creator of Hapna to create a vaccine that prevents the drug's negative side effects, and save the world in the process. Based on the trailer, the series' sci-fi setting, jazzy music (provided by Bonobo, Floating Points and Kamasi Washington) and shaggy-haired protagonist Axel all recall Watanabe's previous series Cowboy Bebop, but Lazarus looks like it'll have its own charms, too. The series' action sequences are choreographed by by John Wick director Chad Stahelski and the story takes inspiration from the opioid crisis and climate change, according to a Polygon interview with Watanabe from October 2024. Watanabe's last series Carole & Tuesday premiered on Netflix in the US in 2019 and Netflix's less-than-stellar live action remake of Cowboy Bebop came and went in 2021. The world is more than ready for some original strength Shinichirō Watanabe anime, and now it won't have to wait much longer to get it.

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