Reviews

Sep 27, 2020
Est
Preliminary (169/? chp)
Ahiru no Sora might come off to some as a similar series to the likes of Haikyuu, with a very short player competing in a tall man’s sport, but that’s about where the comparisons end. Ahiru no Sora is definitely a different kind of story to Haikyuu, and I think you’ll be disappointed if you jump into this expecting them to to scratch the same itch.

-------

The thing that draws me in most about this story is its approach to passion and commitment. It’s the rare case of a manga acknowledging that not everyone can have that extreme passion that drives characters like our main protagonist Sora, especially when they’re only familiarising themselves with the sport in question. Even more impressively, it doesn’t criticise those characters for not matching the level of commitment that the more passionate characters have. Instead, it’s strangely compassionate and seeks to make the readers understand and empathise with these characters. Now that’s not to say that it’s unable to be critical of its characters—on the contrary, when these characters mess up (and oh boy, do they mess up) the series is more than willing to punish them severely for it—but it definitely prioritises compassion and it never demeans its characters in the process. Its way of criticising the characters tends to have a bit more of a... melancholic undertone. This series is as much a delinquent redemption story as it is a basketball one, and that’s really apparent here.

-------

I also love that this series takes full advantage of the sport being played. A lot of sports series shy away from characters changing positions, but since basketball is a sport where positions aren’t actually mandatory, this series opts to do something fun and has players’ roles drastically change depending on who’s on the court at any given time. That gives the matches a really fun energy and keeps them from getting stale, which is important as the matches in this series can be a little long.

-------

Ahiru no Sora is a series that, despite playing around with the format of basketball in a fun and naturalistic way, always places its characters and their growth ahead of the sport itself. For some readers, that will be a flaw, or even a deal-breaker, but for me it really makes the series stand out from the pack, as one of my favourite sports series to date.
Reviewer’s Rating: 9
What did you think of this review?
Nice Nice0
Love it Love it0
Funny Funny0
Show all
It’s time to ditch the text file.
Keep track of your anime easily by creating your own list.
Sign Up Login