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* TheThingThatGoesDoink: Lampshaded in the drama CD, where Tatsuma and Komaki even refer to the one in Aoi's house along these lines.
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Loads And Loads Of Characters is a redirect that should not be linked to
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* LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters: In total 25 characters join the main hero, Tatsuma, and all of them have [[MultipleEndings endings]] not to mention the many supporting characters some of whom also have endings. Then there are all the villains not to mention the different characters in the sequel, Gehouchou (all of whom are the ancestors of the main characters in the Kenpuuchou game) as well as the spin-off games and dramas.
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Deleted Five Man Band example - zero-context FMB examples are being deleted as per Wick Cleaning Projects.
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* FiveManBand
** TheHero: Tatsuma
** TheLancer: Kyouichi (Hotheadedness runs in contrast to Tatsuma's calmness)
** [[TheSmartGuy The Smart Chick]]: Komaki (emotionally volatile, but counts as one)
** TheBigGuy: Yuuya (Though can also be TheSmartGuy at times)
** TheChick: Aoi (She heals, she protects, has some romantic sparks with '''three''' guys)
** TheSixthRanger: Raito, Hisui
** TheHero: Tatsuma
** TheLancer: Kyouichi (Hotheadedness runs in contrast to Tatsuma's calmness)
** [[TheSmartGuy The Smart Chick]]: Komaki (emotionally volatile, but counts as one)
** TheBigGuy: Yuuya (Though can also be TheSmartGuy at times)
** TheChick: Aoi (She heals, she protects, has some romantic sparks with '''three''' guys)
** TheSixthRanger: Raito, Hisui
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* AnimeHair: Kyouichi and Raito
* TheAnimeOfTheGame
* TheAnimeOfTheGame
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* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Yagyu Munetaka caused it. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
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* TurnBasedStrategy
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* RedOniBlueOni: The calm and stoic Tatsuma is Blue the hotheaded Kyouichi is red. The color schemes for their powers and clothing seem to subtly reflect this as Tatsuma wears a blue hoodie and Kyouichi’s bokken glows red when powered up.
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* RedOniBlueOni: The calm and stoic Tatsuma is Blue the hotheaded Kyouichi is red. The color schemes for their powers and clothing seem to subtly reflect this as Tatsuma wears a blue hoodie and Kyouichi’s bokken bokutō glows red when powered up.
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Added Red Oni Blue Oni
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* RedOniBlueOni: The calm and stoic Tatsuma is Blue the hotheaded Kyouichi is red. The color schemes for their powers and clothing seem to subtly reflect this as Tatsuma wears a blue hoodie and Kyouichi’s bokken glows red when powered up.
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None
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* GayOption: Rather like the SummonNight series the game's protagonist can end up with any of the 20+ characters that join him whether they be male or female. Granted most of the male character's endings are platonic but there are subtle underlying hints with some. Special mention must be made for Kyouichi who outright states that he likes the protagonist in his ending -- he is also the only male character that the protagonist can date at Christmas.
to:
* GayOption: Rather like the SummonNight ''VideoGame/SummonNight'' series the game's protagonist can end up with any of the 20+ characters that join him whether they be male or female. Granted most of the male character's endings are platonic but there are subtle underlying hints with some. Special mention must be made for Kyouichi who outright states that he likes the protagonist in his ending -- he is also the only male character that the protagonist can date at Christmas.
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Useful Notes/ pages are not tropes
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* JapaneseHonorifics: ...and lack of them, as each character that joins the player can use one of up to four different ways to call the player depending on how high their relationship value with the player is.
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Useful Notes/ pages are not tropes
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* JapaneseHonorifics: ...and lack of them, as evidenced by Aoi and Kyouichi. They start out calling each other [[TheOjou "Ojou-sama"]] and [[LastNameBasis "Houraiji-kun"]], somewhere along the line they graduate to "Aoi" and "Kyouichi-kun" and by the end it's [[FirstNameBasis "Aoi" and "Kyouichi."]]
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the link\'s at the top of the page, no need for this notice
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Check out the [[Characters/{{Tokyo Majin}} character sheet]] for information on the characters.
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In July 2015, the English dub started airing on U.S. cable network Chiller TV, a horror themed sister channel to Creator/SyFy, as part of their late night Anime Wednesdays block.
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Moving to Trivia.
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http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Tokyo_Majin_Gakuen_Kenpuchou_Tou.jpg
'''''Tokyo Majin''''' (full Japanese title: ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen Kenpuchō: Tō'') is an anime series loosely based on the ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen'' videogame series.
'''''Tokyo Majin''''' (full Japanese title: ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen Kenpuchō: Tō'') is an anime series loosely based on the ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen'' videogame series.
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'''''Tokyo Majin'''''
''Tokyo Majin'' (full Japanese title: ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen Kenpuchō: Tō'') is an anime series loosely based on the ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen'' videogame series.
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!!The anime provides examples of:
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** IdiotHair: The girls, Tatsuma, and Kyouichi.
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* BonusEpisode: The last two episodes are bonus episodes depicting events occurring before the TokyoFireball.
* IdiotHair: The girls, Tatsuma, and Kyouichi.
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!!The games of this series provide examples of:
* CombinationAttack - Every character that joins you, including Tatsuma, has at least one combination attack with one or more characters.
* GayOption - Rather like the SummonNight series the game's protagonist can end up with any of the 20+ characters that join him whether they be male or female. Granted most of the male character's endings are platonic but there are subtle underlying hints with some. Special mention must be made for Kyouichi who outright states that he likes the protagonist in his ending - he is also the only male character that the protagonist can date at Christmas.
* JapaneseHonorifics - ...and lack of them, as each character that joins the player can use one of up to four different ways to call the player depending on how high their relationship value with the player is.
* LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters - In total 25 characters join the main hero, Tatsuma, and all of them have [[MultipleEndings endings]] not to mention the many supporting characters some of whom also have endings. Then there are all the villains not to mention the different characters in the sequel, Gehouchou (all of whom are the ancestors of the main characters in the Kenpuuchou game) as well as the spin-off games and dramas.
* MultipleEndings - Slightly averted in that the actual game's storyline is fairly linear but there are multiple endings with the characters.
* NoExportForYou - To date none of the games have been licensed.
* RelationshipValues - Determines which character Tatsuma will end up with. One of the rarer cases of the relationship values being seen too if you are playing the DS version of the game (after unlocking the Omake mode) or the Oboro-Kiten version of the original game.
* StoryToGameplayRatio - Skewed very, very far on the 'story' side, to the point where you could almost call it a visual novel.
* CombinationAttack - Every character that joins you, including Tatsuma, has at least one combination attack with one or more characters.
* GayOption - Rather like the SummonNight series the game's protagonist can end up with any of the 20+ characters that join him whether they be male or female. Granted most of the male character's endings are platonic but there are subtle underlying hints with some. Special mention must be made for Kyouichi who outright states that he likes the protagonist in his ending - he is also the only male character that the protagonist can date at Christmas.
* JapaneseHonorifics - ...and lack of them, as each character that joins the player can use one of up to four different ways to call the player depending on how high their relationship value with the player is.
* LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters - In total 25 characters join the main hero, Tatsuma, and all of them have [[MultipleEndings endings]] not to mention the many supporting characters some of whom also have endings. Then there are all the villains not to mention the different characters in the sequel, Gehouchou (all of whom are the ancestors of the main characters in the Kenpuuchou game) as well as the spin-off games and dramas.
* MultipleEndings - Slightly averted in that the actual game's storyline is fairly linear but there are multiple endings with the characters.
* NoExportForYou - To date none of the games have been licensed.
* RelationshipValues - Determines which character Tatsuma will end up with. One of the rarer cases of the relationship values being seen too if you are playing the DS version of the game (after unlocking the Omake mode) or the Oboro-Kiten version of the original game.
* StoryToGameplayRatio - Skewed very, very far on the 'story' side, to the point where you could almost call it a visual novel.
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*
*
*
*
*
*
* RelationshipValues -
*
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* BreakHerHeartToSaveHer: Main reason why Koyouichi act like total ass toward Aoi.
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* BreakHerHeartToSaveHer: Main reason One of reasons why Koyouichi act like total ass toward Aoi.
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* BreakHerHeartToSaveHer: Main reason why Koyouichi is so Jerkass toward Aoi.
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* BreakHerHeartToSaveHer: Main reason why Koyouichi is so Jerkass act like total ass toward Aoi.
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* Break Her Heart to Save Her: Main reason why Koyouichi is so Jerkass toward Aoi.
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* Break Her Heart to Save Her: BreakHerHeartToSaveHer: Main reason why Koyouichi is so Jerkass toward Aoi.
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* Break Her Heart to Save Her: Main reason why Koyouichi is so Jerkass toward Aoi.
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* FourPhilosophyEnsemble: Koyuichi (the Cynic), Aoi (the Optimist), Kisaragi (the Realist), Tatsuma (the Apathetic) and Daigo with Sakurai (the Conflicted)
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* AnimeHair - Kyouichi and Raito
** IdiotHair - The girls, Tatsuma, and Kyouichi.
** IdiotHair - The girls, Tatsuma, and Kyouichi.
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* AnimeHair - AnimeHair: Kyouichi and Raito
**IdiotHair - IdiotHair: The girls, Tatsuma, and Kyouichi.
**
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* BonusEpisode - The last two episodes are bonus episodes depicting events occuring before the TokyoFireball.
* BittersweetEnding - The BigBad is defeated, most of the warriors are okay; at the cost of Tokyo and most of its citizens, Aoi is one-eye-blind, Tatsuma is missing in China, and the four Guardians are probably dying.
* BittersweetEnding - The BigBad is defeated, most of the warriors are okay; at the cost of Tokyo and most of its citizens, Aoi is one-eye-blind, Tatsuma is missing in China, and the four Guardians are probably dying.
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* BonusEpisode - The last two episodes are bonus episodes depicting events occuring before the TokyoFireball.
* BittersweetEnding -BittersweetEnding: The BigBad is defeated, most of the warriors are okay; at the cost of Tokyo and most of its citizens, Aoi is one-eye-blind, Tatsuma is missing in China, and the four Guardians are probably dying.dying.
* BonusEpisode: The last two episodes are bonus episodes depicting events occurring before the TokyoFireball.
* BittersweetEnding -
* BonusEpisode: The last two episodes are bonus episodes depicting events occurring before the TokyoFireball.
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** Tendou's and the demonised humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
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** Tendou's and the demonised demonized humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
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* JapaneseHonorifics - ...and lack of them, as evidenced by Aoi and Kyouichi. They start out calling each other [[TheOjou "Ojou-sama"]] and [[LastNameBasis "Houraiji-kun"]], somewhere along the line they graduate to "Aoi" and "Kyouichi-kun" and by the end it's [[FirstNameBasis "Aoi" and "Kyouichi."]]
* TheThingThatGoesDoink - Lampshaded in the drama CD, where Tatsuma and Komaki even refer to the one in Aoi's house along these lines.
* TheThingThatGoesDoink - Lampshaded in the drama CD, where Tatsuma and Komaki even refer to the one in Aoi's house along these lines.
to:
* JapaneseHonorifics - ...JapaneseHonorifics: ...and lack of them, as evidenced by Aoi and Kyouichi. They start out calling each other [[TheOjou "Ojou-sama"]] and [[LastNameBasis "Houraiji-kun"]], somewhere along the line they graduate to "Aoi" and "Kyouichi-kun" and by the end it's [[FirstNameBasis "Aoi" and "Kyouichi."]]
*TheThingThatGoesDoink - TheThingThatGoesDoink: Lampshaded in the drama CD, where Tatsuma and Komaki even refer to the one in Aoi's house along these lines.lines.
* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Yagyu Munetaka caused it. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
*
* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Yagyu Munetaka caused it. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
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* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Yagyu Munetaka caused it. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
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** IdiotHair - The girls, Tatsuma, and Kyochi.
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** IdiotHair - The girls, Tatsuma, and Kyochi.Kyouichi.
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** Tendo's and the demonised humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
* {{Delinquents}} - A lot of them, including and especially Kyouichi. Yuuya used to be one, too.
* {{Delinquents}} - A lot of them, including and especially Kyouichi. Yuuya used to be one, too.
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** Tendo's Tendou's and the demonised humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
*{{Delinquents}} - {{Delinquents}}: A lot of them, including and especially Kyouichi. Yuuya used to be one, too.
*
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** [[TheChick The Medic Chick]]: Aoi (She heals, she protects, has some romantic sparks with '''three''' guys)
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** [[TheChick The Medic Chick]]: TheChick: Aoi (She heals, she protects, has some romantic sparks with '''three''' guys)
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** IdiotHair - The girls and Kyochi.
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** IdiotHair - The girls girls, Tatsuma, and Kyochi.
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* BittersweetEnding - The BigBad is defeated, all the warriors are okay; at the cost of Tokyo and most of its citizens, Aoi's right eye (the Bodhisattva Eye) is gone, Tatsuma is missing, and the four Guardians are probably dying.
to:
* BittersweetEnding - The BigBad is defeated, all most of the warriors are okay; at the cost of Tokyo and most of its citizens, Aoi's right eye (the Bodhisattva Eye) Aoi is gone, one-eye-blind, Tatsuma is missing, missing in China, and the four Guardians are probably dying.
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* DefeatMeansFriendship: The Sumida Shitennou whom Kyouichi and Tatsuma defeat in the first episode end up as Kyouichi's lackeys. Also, Raito, Reiji, the Martial Fist joined the team in fighting the BigBad. Tendo's and the demonised humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
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* DefeatMeansFriendship: The Sumida Shitennou whom Kyouichi and Tatsuma defeat in the first episode end up as Kyouichi's lackeys. Also, lackeys.
**Also, Raito, Reiji, the Martial Fist joined the team in fighting theBigBad. Tendo's BigBad.
**Tendo's and the demonised humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
**Also, Raito, Reiji, the Martial Fist joined the team in fighting the
**Tendo's and the demonised humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
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** TheLancer: Kyouichi
** TheSmartGuy: Komaki (though emotionally volatile; can sometimes be seen as TheChick).
** TheSmartGuy: Komaki (though emotionally volatile; can sometimes be seen as TheChick).
to:
** TheLancer: Kyouichi
Kyouichi (Hotheadedness runs in contrast to Tatsuma's calmness)
**TheSmartGuy: [[TheSmartGuy The Smart Chick]]: Komaki (though emotionally volatile; can sometimes be seen (emotionally volatile, but counts as TheChick).one)
**
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** TheChick: Aoi
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** TheChick: Aoi[[TheChick The Medic Chick]]: Aoi (She heals, she protects, has some romantic sparks with '''three''' guys)
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* JapaneseHonorifics - ...and lack of them, as evidenced by Aoi and Kyouichi. They start out calling each other "Hime-sama" and [[LastNameBasis "Houraiji-kun"]], somewhere along the line they graduate to "Aoi" and "Kyouichi-kun" and by the end it's [[FirstNameBasis "Aoi" and "Kyouichi."]]
to:
* JapaneseHonorifics - ...and lack of them, as evidenced by Aoi and Kyouichi. They start out calling each other "Hime-sama" [[TheOjou "Ojou-sama"]] and [[LastNameBasis "Houraiji-kun"]], somewhere along the line they graduate to "Aoi" and "Kyouichi-kun" and by the end it's [[FirstNameBasis "Aoi" and "Kyouichi."]]
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* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
to:
* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Yagyu Munetaka caused it. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
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Tweaks~ (moving Ho Yay to YMMV...)
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''Tokyo Majin'' (full Japanese title: ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen Kenpuchō: Tō'') is an anime series loosely based on the ''Tokyo Majin Gakuen'' videogame series.
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The anime provides examples of:
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The games of this series provide examples of:
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* HoYay - Mainly between either Tatsuma (Protagonist)/Kyouichi or Kyouichi/Moroha. This also ties into the anime which shocks many of the western fans as they aren't aware that it originally started in the games and was most likely subtly hinted at in the anime as a nod to the game.
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None
** IdiotHair - The girls and Kyochi.
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* BonusEpisode - The last episode is a bonus episode that explores Tatsuma and Daigo's backstory.
* [[DefeatMeansFriendship Defeat Means "Friendship"]] - The Sumida Shitennou whom Kyouichi and Tatsuma defeat in the first episode end up as Kyouichi's lackeys.
* {{Delinquents}} - A lot of them, including Kyouichi. Yuuya used to be one, too.
* [[DefeatMeansFriendship Defeat Means "Friendship"]] - The Sumida Shitennou whom Kyouichi and Tatsuma defeat in the first episode end up as Kyouichi's lackeys.
* {{Delinquents}} - A lot of them, including Kyouichi. Yuuya used to be one, too.
to:
* BonusEpisode - The last episode is a two episodes are bonus episode that explores episodes depicting events occuring before the TokyoFireball.
* BittersweetEnding - The BigBad is defeated, all the warriors are okay; at the cost of Tokyo and most of its citizens, Aoi's right eye (the Bodhisattva Eye) is gone, Tatsuma is missing, andDaigo's backstory.
the four Guardians are probably dying.
*[[DefeatMeansFriendship Defeat Means "Friendship"]] - ClusterFBomb: The American dub loves this. There is a visual PrecisionFStrike though, in the form of graffiti on a tunnel wall, in the first episode.
* DefeatMeansFriendship: The Sumida Shitennou whom Kyouichi and Tatsuma defeat in the first episode end up as Kyouichi'slackeys.
lackeys. Also, Raito, Reiji, the Martial Fist joined the team in fighting the BigBad. Tendo's and the demonised humans' souls also give a hand in the final fight.
* {{Delinquents}} - A lot of them, including and especially Kyouichi. Yuuya used to be one, too.
* BittersweetEnding - The BigBad is defeated, all the warriors are okay; at the cost of Tokyo and most of its citizens, Aoi's right eye (the Bodhisattva Eye) is gone, Tatsuma is missing, and
*
* DefeatMeansFriendship: The Sumida Shitennou whom Kyouichi and Tatsuma defeat in the first episode end up as Kyouichi's
* {{Delinquents}} - A lot of them, including and especially Kyouichi. Yuuya used to be one, too.
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* JapaneseHonorifics - ...and lack of them, as evidenced by Aoi and Kyouichi. They start out calling each other [[LastNameBasis "Misato" and Houraiji-kun,"]] somewhere along the line they graduate to "Aoi" and "Kyouichi-kun" and by the end it's [[FirstNameBasis "Aoi" and "Kyouichi."]]
to:
* JapaneseHonorifics - ...and lack of them, as evidenced by Aoi and Kyouichi. They start out calling each other "Hime-sama" and [[LastNameBasis "Misato" and Houraiji-kun,"]] "Houraiji-kun"]], somewhere along the line they graduate to "Aoi" and "Kyouichi-kun" and by the end it's [[FirstNameBasis "Aoi" and "Kyouichi."]]
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* WorldOfBadass: It got dialed back a bit after the first episode, but it's there. The first episode features the five superpowered main characters, but there's also random Triad guys with improbable weapons and Feng Shui magic (not that it saves them from the corpse puppeteer) and the bullies at school do crazy moves like spitting out nails at high speed onto a spinning bat to form a nail-bat. Even the IntrepidReporter girl has ninja-like hiding skills to ambush people she's investigating.
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* TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse: Given the setting.
* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
* WorldOfBadass: It got dialed back a bit after the first episode, but it's there. The first episode features the five superpowered main characters, but there's also random Triad guys with improbable weapons and Feng Shui magic (not that it saves them from the corpse puppeteer) and the bullies at school do crazy moves like spitting out nails at high speed onto a spinning bat to form a nail-bat. Even the IntrepidReporter girl has ninja-like hiding skills to ambush people she'sinvestigating.
investigating. The final fight ramps it back up again.
* TokyoFireball: Offscreen, before the final fight. Its ruins are foreshadowed in the openings.
* WorldOfBadass: It got dialed back a bit after the first episode, but it's there. The first episode features the five superpowered main characters, but there's also random Triad guys with improbable weapons and Feng Shui magic (not that it saves them from the corpse puppeteer) and the bullies at school do crazy moves like spitting out nails at high speed onto a spinning bat to form a nail-bat. Even the IntrepidReporter girl has ninja-like hiding skills to ambush people she's