PERSONA 4 THE GOLDEN ANIMATION
STATUS
COMPLETE
EPISODES
12
RELEASE
September 26, 2014
LENGTH
23 min
DESCRIPTION
Spring. Far from the city, time flows peacefully in this rural town. As the cherry blossoms scatter in the wind, a young man named Yu Narukami steps off the train at Yasoinaba Station. Yu has come to this town, where his uncle lives, for family reasons; he will be transferring into the local high school, Yasogami High. And so begins his school life... The shopping mall after school. A series of murders taking place in town. The Midnight Channel, airing late at night.... What lies in store for Yu and his friends ‘this time around?
(Source: Aniplex of America)
CAST
Naoto Shirogane
Romi Park
Yuu Narukami
Daisuke Namikawa
Rise Kujikawa
Rie Kugimiya
Yousuke Hanamura
Shoutarou Morikubo
Chie Satonaka
Yui Horie
Kanji Tatsumi
Tomokazu Seki
Yukiko Amagi
Ami Koshimizu
Marie
Kana Hanazawa
Kuma
Kappei Yamaguchi
Tooru Adachi
Mitsuaki Madono
Nanako Dojima
Akemi Kanda
Ryotarou Dojima
Unshou Ishizuka
Margaret
Sayaka Oohara
Kanami Mashita
Minako Kotobuki
EPISODES
Dubbed
RELATED TO PERSONA 4 THE GOLDEN ANIMATION
REVIEWS
Ciaora39
41/100An absolute shame for the sake of milking a fantastic series.Continue on AniListWhat began as a triumphant success, both critically and commercially, in the gaming culture, even outside the JRPG community, has now devolved into whoring itself out. That is not a negative connotation, as the spin-off games and the Vita port are excellent in their own right. However, the event that started the whole milking process began with announcing an entire adaptation of Persona 4 in anime form back in 2011. It would be of no surprise to anyone that it was a thing that, in the end, would be looked at as a project that could not be called anything but unnecessary.
Speaking as someone whose favorite game is Persona 4 and will cherish it till the day I die, I’ve also adored its Vita port, Persona 4 Golden. Its different mechanics and new fantastic scenes also brought a new character, which breathed all new life into it. After much popular demand by absolutely no one, Aniplex thought to themselves, “Remember that Persona 4 anime we made a couple of years ago? Why don’t we make another one for the port to cash in on the hype for Persona?” Atlus probably had a hand in the decision too. Still, Persona 4 the Golden Animation is nothing more than just decent fan service for fans to see, even with the inevitable cringe-worthy attempts to adapt it fully.
For those who aren’t aware of the concept of Persona 4 Golden, it is another version of the original game with a different side character that we get to know throughout her own story. The anime wants to solely focus on the new one, named Marie, and find out the mystery of who she is and why she is there. These do not bode well in how they handle the pacing and development. At one point, there are several parts where they skip over significant growth to fit 13 episodes in with Marie’s and animate the extra scenes; this includes the beach fanservice, the band practice, motorcycle licenses, etc.
Ironically, this problem of fitting too much content into one season was the same problem with the 1st season. The creators wanted to include as much content as possible to make it feel like an authentic Persona game in full anime spectacle. While it is admirable of them to at least try to accomplish this, it fails considerably. There are many instances where the pacing felt too quick for us to understand and feel for our characters. If they were to make this into a bonafide hit, a more prolonged episode count would’ve sufficed a bit more for one. But in this day and age where shows more extended than 24 episodes all come and go, I don’t think Aniplex has that kind of budget to have had that accomplished.
Art and animation have their moments of eerie distinctiveness, where the characters are drawn quite an on point to how Atlus usually draws their Shin Megami Tensei characters. However, there are moments where the art quickly goes down south at a draw distance where the characters look very deformed. The animation can be guilty of this, too, with rigid motions at specific frames and cutting corners here and there. When the battle scenes occur, the art and animation are pretty stellar to see, so you can tell where Aniplex put most of their budget towards.
Despite this not being an excellent adaptation, should this be outright slandered by Persona fans? Not entirely. What is still intact from the source is the humor, which can still serve to be a delight on multiple occasions. Seeing them in the animated form helps make it more memorable in this light. Not only that, but there are a few exciting bonuses they added to the story, despite its flawed presentation. Adachi’s past is given a lot of in-depth analysis, which has him seen in a more sympathetic light in how he became a police officer.
Many will ask the obvious question: Should I play the games or watch the anime? Or should I watch/play Persona 3 first before 4? Depending on your preference, they will prove to be more fruitful in experiencing a truly brilliant story. Golden only proves to have more of the same systematic problems from the previous iteration. Even without mentioning it in regards to how it compares to the game, it isn’t anything that noticeably special. Fanservice shows are of no small quantity these days, so your best bet is to leave the fanservice for the fanatics to dive into.
Grade: C-
SIMILAR ANIMES YOU MAY LIKE
- ANIME ActionPERSONA5 the Animation
- ANIME ActionPERSONA -trinity soul-
- ANIME ActionBlack★Rock Shooter (TV)
- ANIME AdventureDennou Coil
- OVA ActionBLUE SEED 2
SCORE
- (3.15/5)
TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inSeptember 26, 2014
Main Studio A-1 Pictures
Favorited by 162 Users
Hashtag #P4G_A