Review

by Kevin Cormack,

Trillion Game

Episodes 14-26 Anime Review

Synopsis:
Trillion Game Episodes 14-26 Anime Review
Plucky underdogs Haru and Gaku's Trillion Game company enters the big business leagues. However, all is not well between them, as Haru's reckless decision-making causes problems for Gaku's team of game developers. The imminent release of their new social game attracts yet more opposition from powerful rivals Dragon Bank, and attention of different kinds from the mercurial Kirihime and her domineering father. As Trillion Game diversifies into the entertainment industry, twists and turns abound on our two protagonists' road to obscene wealth.
Review:

When last we left would-be trillionaires Haru and Gaku, it seemed an irreparable rift had formed between them. Having unilaterally decided to use all of their company Trillion Game's available cash to buy two billion yen in entertainment company God Promo's stock, Haru left Gaku without any funds to pay for development of their planed mobile game. Describing Gaku's creative endeavor as merely a “ruse,” Haru walked off, leaving Gaku reeling and unable to vocalize his objections.

Throughout Trillion Game's first season, we were teased with the possibility of a Haru and Gaku fallout – during the infrequent flash-forwards to Gaku's successful future as an apparently solo businessman, Haru was nowhere to be seen. Then there was business rival Kirihime's confident assertion that companies set up by friends inevitably dissolve due to conflict. For much of Trillion Game's second half, Haru is absent (which may be a good thing), leaving us to focus on Gaku, while wondering if the supposedly central friendship can be repaired.

As usual with Haru, nothing is ever quite as it seems. For an alleged lead character, we know little of his personal life – not his family or childhood, nor do we learn anything about his living circumstances, nor anything about his motivations other than his overwhelming desire to make ungodly quantities of money. This makes him very hard to root for, so it's just as well we spend more time with Gaku, who fits the fish-out-of water anime protagonist mold more comfortably. Haru's essentially a thinly-characterized plot device who swoops in every now and then to cause chaos and act unpredictably, smirking as if everything is going entirely to plan.

Of course, most of the time it seems he's winging it, making snap decisions left and right, lying his ass off to steer others in the direction he wants. Gaku is honest to a fault, yet even he learns fro Haru to bluff at the most important times. Haru treats everything like a game, including the livelihoods of his employees. This means he appears both coldly aloof and unexpectedly generous, depending on what the plot requires him to do – either leaving the company without funds to pay its workers, or suddenly announcing he'll increase everyone's wages tenfold. While he and Gaku are supposed to be partners, it's almost always the unfeasibly ballsy Haru who makes the big, game-changing decisions.

This cour is split into three main arcs relating Trillion Game's ascension in the entertainment industry. First is the aforementioned mobile game story where Gaku (with some off-screen help from Haru) manages to poach Dragon Bank's genius gacha game designer, the money-obsessed Hebijima, a middle-aged guy with bleached blonde hair and an utterly cringe-worthy personality. You can tell this is by the same author as Dr. Stone, because most characters' personalities can be distilled down to one or two simple traits. Then there are the infodumps – which while aren't quite as frequent as Dr. Stone's science seminars, do layer on basic economics in fairly didactic fashion.

I was very vocal in my review of Trillion Game's first cour about my disdain for unregulated, greed-infested capitalism. Writer Inagaki at least attempts to infuse some basic morality into the gacha gaming arc. While openly admitting the predatory business practices and dark design aspects that contribute to capturing players in a gacha ecosystem, Trillion Game goes out of its way to advocate for workers' rights, and to argue for the fair remuneration of creatives in the gaming industry. You know, paid for by money harvested from whales trapped by terminal gacha addiction? (As a long-term Fate/Grand Order player, I can't really criticize too convincingly here…)

While the second arc pits Trillion Game directly against their behemoth rival Dragon Bank, placing Kirihime's powerful father as the scheming, greedy villain (there's little difference between him and Haru other than age), the third arc returns to a vague examination of the morality of capitalism. Haru wants his own news service, viewing this as a way to legitimize Trillion Game's new media streaming outlet. Again, this is another “ruse,” but at least he recognizes Gaku's previous success at making an actually decently popular gacha game when he didn't need to. Haru argues that businesses need “scumbags” like him to provide the money and resources while others can engage with the honest work of making decent products. As much as I hate to admit it, this most likely is how businesses work. After all, aren't a large proportion of CEOs supposedly sociopaths?

I do worry that most of this attempt at deeper justification for Haru's actions is merely lip-service, however. By the end of these twenty-six episodes we know little more about Haru than we did at the beginning. He wants to be the greediest, richest man in the world. Why? Character exploration doesn't seem to be the point. At least Gaku develops as a person, gradually becoming more confident, stepping out from beneath Haru's shadow to make some of his own startlingly brave choices. While it's likely he'll never stop being a socially awkward geek (and his worry about money changing him stands him in good stead for remaining a decent human being), I guess it's almost possible to imagine him eventually leading a business without Haru's direct supervision.

During Haru's absence for much of the season, the supporting cast get some more opportunity to shine, from passionate game designer Sakura, to overwhelmingly sensible and straight-laced company president Rinrin, they all get some fun moments. I do like TV reporter Akari, only introduced in the last few episodes, for her infectious intensity and integrity. At least there are some other actual human beings we can empathize with in Trillion Game, even if they're all dragged into the orbit of Haru's black hole of limitless avarice.

The story's a freewheeling mess, rushing from one mad scheme to the next, with regular daft cliffhangers and last-minute plot twists. At least that means Trillion Game is rarely boring, even if it's impossible to take its ridiculously contrived plot seriously. Its upbeat soundtrack is oddly old-fashioned, at turns urgent and humorous – if anything, it sounds like a classic heist movie. I could almost imagine the Rat Pack providing the tunes had it been a few decades older. (There's even an episode set in Vegas, because of course there is).

Ryōichi Ikegami's character designs still look awkward when translated to animation, and it's certain that Studio Madhouse has their C-team on this show. The animation is mostly kept to a minimum – no Frieren-style sakuga cuts here, I'm afraid. On the few occasions that CG is used during crowd scenes, it looks embarrassingly awful, with overly-simplified character rigs that look desperately out-of-place. While I got most of my capitalism criticism out of my system last time, Trillion Game still asks its viewer to root for a seemingly amoral, entirely self-interested anti-hero, who just happens to make decisions that sometimes benefit his friends. In real life, I'd run the hell away from someone like Haru, and it's a miracle I managed to stick it out this long with the animated version. I didn't dislike the second half quite as much as the first, but I remain disappointed that writer Inagaki didn't use his story as a more incisive deconstruction of the capitalist dream, like I hoped it might have been. As a piece of fluffy, silly entertainment, it's fine. I have little compulsion to follow Haru or Gaku's far-fetched story any further, though.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of Anime News Network, its employees, owners, or sponsors.
Grade:
Overall (sub) : B-
Story : B-
Animation : C
Art : C
Music : C

+ Reduced focus on Haru allows other characters time to shine, many of whom it's actually possible to empathise with. Always entertaining in its ridiculousness.
Haru is still eminently punchable. The show as a whole doesn't look great. Character art is ugly. I don't like the opening or ending tracks much.

discuss this in the forum (7 posts) |
bookmark/share with: short url
Add this anime to
Production Info:
Director: Yūzō Satō
Series Composition: Ryūnosuke Kingetsu
Script:
Mitsutaka Hirota
Tomomi Kawaguchi
Ryūnosuke Kingetsu
Storyboard:
Kentaro Hori
Atsuko Ishizuka
Yoshiaki Kawajiri
Kenichi Kawamura
Akiko Nakano
Yūzō Satō
Kanji Wakabayashi
Chie Yamashiro
Unit Director:
Kentaro Hori
Il Jin Hwang
Young Sik Hwang
Noboru Ishida
Atsuko Ishizuka
Bong Duk Kim
Min Sun Kim
Tatsunori Miyake
Akiko Nakano
Yūzō Satō
Kanji Wakabayashi
Chie Yamashiro
Music: Takurō Iga
Original creator:
Ryōichi Ikegami
Riichirō Inagaki
Character Design: Kei Tsuchiya
Art:
Takao Makino
Sawako Takagi
Hideyuki Ueno
Chief Animation Director:
Won Hee Cho
Yeon Jung Ha
Mi Jung Hwang
Kil Yong Jang
Sang Mi Jang
Eun Hee Jeong
Hye Jung Jo
Ji Moon Jung
Hyuk Jung Kwon
Yang Hyun Oh
Jin Hee Song
Kei Tsuchiya
Ai Yokoyama
Jung Hee Yun
Animation Director:
Jae Un Bae
Mi Jung Cho
Eun Young Choi
Jong Ki Choi
Yu Il Go
Kyung Ok Gu
Seung Hee Ha
Yeon Jung Ha
Kyung Mi Ham
So Yi Han
Runa Harano
Da Young Hong
Mi-Kyung Hong
Young Sik Hwang
Sang Mi Jang
Eun Hee Jeong
Hye Jung Jo
Ji Moon Jung
Bong Duk Kim
Da Bin Kim
Hee Jung Kim
Hong Ik Kim
Hyun Kyung Kim
Jung Rim Kim
Ran Young Kim
Seong Beom Kim
Ye Ja Ko
Hee Jae Kwon
Chan Ju Lee
Dong Hoon Lee
Gyeong Soon Lee
Sung Hee Lee
Hyung Joon Mubon
Takashi Muratani
Ae Ri Park
Soo In Park
Young Hee Park
Soon Young Seo
Seong Min Shin
Seung Sook Shin
Geum Seop Sin
Hyun Ju Song
Seung Taek Song
Son Sopheapanha
Meth Soriya
Vuth Sovanthida
Honami Takeuchi
Keum Young Woo
Seung Hyun Yun
Translation:
Sun Il Kim
Seong Ho Moon
3D Director: Yasutaka Tanaka
Sound Director: Kisuke Koizumi
Director of Photography: Hironobu Hatanaka
Executive producer:
Takahiro Hibi
Ayumu Hoshino
Hiroki Kikuno
Keisuke Sano
Shō Tanaka
Sanae Tashiro
Producer:
Maiko Higa
Jōtarō Ishigami
Shuka Nishimae
Kōichi Sano
Daiki Tsunemoto
Yuki Yoshida

Full encyclopedia details about
Trillion Game (TV)

Review homepage / archives