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THE VIDEO:  

https://mega.nz/file/nz5VkSDT#pZPOwBP-CCnexlGZkY-e-dGvin4dhKibTIqnOQI2d_0  


Damn, that's a REALLY impressive household Emiya has going now!


I WATCH UNLIMITED BLADE WORKS AT CRUNCHY: https://beta.crunchyroll.com/series/GY8V11X7Y/fatestay-night

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Comments

Phillip Ribbink

As far as Illya going from sweet, adorable little girl to cold-hearted psycho. Let's just say, a lot happened in those ten years since the last Grail War. Also speaking of the Harem, there really isn't a bad choice for best girl from the characters we've been introduced to. Saber, Rin, Sakura and Fuji-nee are all first class choices.

Xeno

Okay, so seeing the title and the fact that this episode doesn't have a whole lot happening in it, maybe I can use this comment to explain the original release of this story? It's going to be a long read, sorry, but I get passionate about this kinda thing lol Type-Moon was a game-development company in Japan that got it's footing in the "eroge" market, which are essentially interactive erotic novels. Their breakout hit, Tsukihime, was one such game, all the way back in 1999 (the devs passed around the beta files on floppy discs!). The character designer and main artist, Takashi Takeuchi and the main scenario writer, Kinoko Nasu, were the driving force behind the games Type-Moon created. Nasu, though, had dreams of being more than just a writer for porn games, and even admitted later on that he was bad at writing sex into his stories anyhow. He wanted to be taken more seriously as a author and a storyteller. When Type-Moon's next project came around, there was a lot of pressure from "up top" to follow the general formula that was making eroge sell at the time. Eroge were mainly targeted at females, surprisingly, and as such the original draft had the main character, Shirou Emiya, female, and King Arthur would be male as in the traditional story. Nasu was able to wrangle some creative liberties away from the corporate end of things, and was able to change the story significantly, and even changed the main character to be male, but that left a strange thing considering that King Arthur would be a romance option in the completed game. As such, they switched King Arthur's gender as well, and thus "Artoria" is born. Sadly, the sex was non-negotiable, and Fate/Stay Night includes a multitude of sex scenes between Shirou and many of the females in the story. The crux of the game was that you were able to make decisions as Shirou at critical moments in the story, and these led you to different "routes", some of which were "bad ends" where you had to restart cuz Shirou died. The three main routes, "Fate", "Unlimited Blade Works", and "Heaven's Feel" are all vastly differing paths for Shirou that focus on romance with Saber, Rin, and Sakura respectively. The Fate route, with Saber romance, was animated back in 2007 by Studio Deen and was poorly received, and is not recommended as a way to enjoy Fate/Stay Night in anime form. What we are watching here, is Unlimited Blade Works, the route of the story that has Shirou interact more with Rin Tohsaka. The final route, which is quite dark and depressing, is Heaven's Feel, which ties up the drama in Sakura's life that was shown in Fate/Zero. This route was recently adapted into a movie trilogy that is fantastically animated by Studio Ufotable. I would hope you have some way to find time for them in the future. Where does Fate/Zero that you already watched, come into all this? Well... the main writer Kinoko Nasu of the original FSN did not write Fate/Zero! Gen Urobuchi, known in the light novel world as "Urobutcher", is a novelist that is famous for killing off his characters and making a difficult to appreciate ending to his stories because it's rarely all sunshine and happiness. He was brought on to write Fate/Zero as a series of novels explaining the Fourth Grail War, which was then adapted by Ufotable in 2011, as you already watched that entire series. Being as it's a prequel, even though it came out AFTER the original FSN, it segues nicely into Unlimited Blade Works, now doesn't it? What happened going forward? The Fate/Stay Night erotic visual novel was well-received, enough so that Nasu was finally able to break out of that industry and start taking the universe he worked so hard on into different places. He's not a fan of the sex that was in the original, so most adaptations remove such scenes unless they are vital to the plot, so don't expect Shirou to go banging any of his "harem" just yet! Sorry this took so long, and maybe you didn't have the time to read it all, but I just love the Fate series so much and figured you, or anybody else that sees this comment, would appreciate the backstory!

Anonymous

I think Kara no Kyoukai is also part of the same universe(ish). Very good movies that somehow you remember the feeling it left you with rather than the plot. Also has some of the best music in anime.