Attached: kino.jpg (1280x720, 68.21K)
This is kino
Xavier Walker
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Oliver Evans
Chase Allen
kino is heckin' cute and valid
Charles Sanchez
Kino loves big stuff stuffing her butt.
Daniel Miller
I miss potato Kino, the new one doesn't have the same charm.
Henry Cook
a journey of kino
Michael Gonzalez
Why didn't Kino tell the railway workers what was happening?
Jason Gray
Evan Hill
Her show has been on my backlog for well over a decade by now.
Should I finally watch it?
Hudson Long
I don't know. Do you like kino?
Aaron Taylor
The character? Idk, design-wise she's fine.
Connor Howard
This is the truth.
Gavin Davis
checked
yea
Wyatt Price
If I hugged her, would I die?
Owen Watson
that whole show was kino
Jace Howard
Well… she’s actually not the real Kino if you know what I mean.
Christian Myers
Indeed OP. Indeed.
Brayden Thompson
m.youtube.com
this is soul music, and by that i don't mean n word music
Hunter Gonzalez
>m.
Isaac Fisher
So what's better, the 2003 anime or the 2017 one?
Blake Davis
I like both, but prefer the 2003's atmosphere and art direction. Because Kino no Tabi is told in a very disjointed fashion it lends itself to episodic storytelling, so the 2003 version didn't follow the books in a 1:1 fashion and hopped around a bit. The 2017 anime though follows the books as written pretty closely. So there's not as much overlap as you'd think between the anime series, though there is some.
The main drawback to the 2017 anime, in my opinion anyway, are some scenes with gratuitous CGI. The art style is also different from 2003, feeling a lot more "modern", but I don't consider that bad, really. If you like the soft, "potato" look, the 2003 will appeal to you more. If you want something that has a more crisp, modern feel, the 2017 will appeal more. Oh, and 2003 isn't available in HD as far as I know. Only ever released on DVD, so 480p is yer lot. If that's a deal breaker, stick with 2017.