After all, Date a Live II is a stardom for some new characters such as a pair of twins, new AST (Anti-Spirit Team) members, and even a rising idol. The show decides to omit various parts to get more time for the main actors and actresses. I confess to myself that the sequel is disappointing when it comes to adapting faithful material. The main concern is rush and this should be expected. Rather than a full one cour show (the typical 12-13 episodes), this sequel only focuses on 10 episodes adapting volumes 5-7. Some gimmicky show – dating becoming the solution to save the world.īased off the light novels written by Koishi Tachibana, one noticeable attribute to this adaption is the shortened length. It continues to mush around its formulation of dating and turns it into Date a Live II continues directly after the events for season 1. Instead, they are spirits, born with supernatural powers who are viewed as a threat to their world. While that’s partially right, it also adds additional elements because those so-called girls aren’t actually normal as part of society. As a harem show, you’d expect all the girls drooling over him. Date a Live wastes no time adapting this concept by having Shido Itsuka date various girls/spirits, earn their feelings, and kiss them to seal the deal.
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