Interesting work, similar to Zero in a sense, but this one is driven by science and realistic.
The rhythm in the early stage was a bit slow. When I first watched it, I didn't quite know what story to tell in the first 4 or 5 episodes. A lot of settings have been added at the beginning, such as a red-haired girl who died inexplicably, a PC computer in search of ancient times, an experiment in banana microwave ovens, a tech house, a pseudo-mother in a temple, a mysterious working king, a more mysterious glasses girl...and the difference between the characters. A lot of memes were added to the dialogue, and it wasn't until the experiment was started that I didn't know what kind of story was being told.
The red-haired girl who died in the front can be ignored for now. As the plot progresses, I find the glasses girl of the ancient PC computer, the restored banana microwave oven phenomenon, hack into the current authority system to steal information, and grope for the first time and several times after obtaining important props. The second D-EMAIL modified the timeline, and finally found that the current timeline childhood sweetheart will die, jumping to another line, the red-haired girl will die, inseparable between the fish and the bear's paw... This is a big hole in the early stage, and I will try my best in the later stage. Going to make up the story, in the process of saving, you can see the protagonist's subtle emotional changes to different characters and his own growth. I have seen a lot of the setting of the second male protagonist, but I am not used to it after becoming serious in the later period. If you look at it carefully, there are too many golden sentences and dialogues in the second middle school.
After reading it, I became no longer entangled and cherished the moment, time is gone forever, everything is the choice of Steins Gate.
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