The manga has great pacing, with each chapter ending and picking up on a good spot. Let’s also hope for the unravel of this story to be worth our look back with a melancholic albeit satisfied nostalgy. If i have any fears, they would be the worldbuilding not keeping up or the mangá falling into a battle shounen cliché which would be highly detrimental to its all around sense of being įor those compelled enough by my words to give it a go, i hope you enjoy it as much as i am. Intentionally difuse and drafty but at the same time, detailed to a point where you forget to read the mangá just to look at the panels. That’s what i get from this art style and i absolutelly adore it. ![]() No matter where you stand, none of it stops you from being marveled by this story and the simple fact that it might even make you rethink your own standing about what technology should be like and how should it be used, would be enough to call it a must read.Īh the art… on this one i might be biased but, the sketchy sensation you get from those architecture projects that are not finished but elaborated enough to give you a sense of fullness. Shall AI emulate humans, does that gives us more benefits than problems? Or should we limit the AI to problem solving so it facilitates our lives? ![]() You do not need to agree with the ethical/philosophical ideas of the author (if there are any, it can also be me projecting) about what the relationship of humans and robots should be, or even to witch extent should we develop technology just because we can. ![]() Nevertheless, the way the author brings to the first plan, the transition of what we could call a fully logical robot way of thinking to an embebed medium where human thoughts and feelings can mold and transform those same robot logical procedures to an hybrid state of existence, is done seemlessly.Įqually well done is the way the author transitions from core theme from one chapter to another, giving you the the delighfull feeling of a journey without casting off the central plot. We who love mangá, dont start reading something just because it might be a masterpiece. Pratically everything that was made in mangá, it could be given a book for, with the same topics and insights, but done way before. In my view that is an erroneos way of looking at it. So, even for someone who is not the most prolific reader, there is a chance he already read something by Asimov who might give a sense of lack of originality to this story. The mangá/anime universe is tied with the gaming universe, and both with technology. And this is where some negative critics could come in. ![]() relating the basilar functions of the Gears to the Asimov’s 3 laws of robotics. It’s evident that the author borrows the themes of Asimov, looselly In a world where humans seem to be scarce, their feelings are expressed by robots who must have learned from trial and error and repetition, how is it to emulate humans or even become them. However, these ‘human feelings’ aren't manifested by flesh and blood people (aside from Roue) but they're show up from the Gears (conscious robots), which exposes philosophical conflicts between their sense of “duty” and the “truth”. We could simplify the history to, as Zuki_147 said in his/her review, “desolate world where human thoughts are the protagonists. Heart Gear, simply put, completelly drawing in.
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