The cult chaos of Panty & Stocking crashes back into our feeds, and we’re sorting the sparks from the smoke. We pull apart what made season one a nine-out-of-ten riot—cartoon shell, anime soul, and that iconic Anarchy cue—and why season two, despite Trigger’s hyper stylized flair, feels sleeker but softer around the edges. Think Newgrounds energy filtered through modern sensibilities: the parodies still pop, the transformations still dazzle, yet the writing sometimes swaps sharp character...
All content for The ZONE Podcast: Nerdy News and Reviews is the property of JetBlackXtreme and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The cult chaos of Panty & Stocking crashes back into our feeds, and we’re sorting the sparks from the smoke. We pull apart what made season one a nine-out-of-ten riot—cartoon shell, anime soul, and that iconic Anarchy cue—and why season two, despite Trigger’s hyper stylized flair, feels sleeker but softer around the edges. Think Newgrounds energy filtered through modern sensibilities: the parodies still pop, the transformations still dazzle, yet the writing sometimes swaps sharp character...
Turkey! Time to Strike: Bowling in the Sengoku Era
The ZONE Podcast: Nerdy News and Reviews
20 minutes
1 week ago
Turkey! Time to Strike: Bowling in the Sengoku Era
A glowing bowling ball, a flash of light, and five girls land in the Sengoku era—what starts as a cozy sports setup turns into a time-twisting story about fate, loyalty, and what “winning” really means. We dive into Turkey: Time to Strike with open skepticism, genuine surprise, and a lot of laughs as a supposed bowling club anime morphs into a smart blend of sports drama and historical adventure. First, we unpack the core tension between Mai’s “fun first” philosophy and Rena’s no-compromise ...
The ZONE Podcast: Nerdy News and Reviews
The cult chaos of Panty & Stocking crashes back into our feeds, and we’re sorting the sparks from the smoke. We pull apart what made season one a nine-out-of-ten riot—cartoon shell, anime soul, and that iconic Anarchy cue—and why season two, despite Trigger’s hyper stylized flair, feels sleeker but softer around the edges. Think Newgrounds energy filtered through modern sensibilities: the parodies still pop, the transformations still dazzle, yet the writing sometimes swaps sharp character...