"Haikyū!!" Spikes It In For The Game-Winning Point

King Baby Duck tips his hat to Beck for his Grammy victory, but waves his finger at Kanye West for his attitude towards the Odelay master. Excitement is in the air as Spider-Man joins his pals in the Marvel Cinematic

I've never been one for sports-based anime series. In fact the only one I remember watching for a good amount of time was The Prince of Tennis, although I grew tired of watching its protagonist Ryoma act like an egotistical

King Baby Duck rubs it in as he celebrates a well-deserved Super Bowl victory, and talks about why Benedict Cumberbatch may have a solid chance at Oscar gold in a couple weeks. The flaws of the movie Lupin The Third

The following is an expanded piece originally discussed on Episode 78 of No Borders No Race. Nintendo is now slowly but surely starting to bring out the Wii titles onto the Wii U eShop, with Punch-Out!!, Metroid Prime Trilogy, and Super

The Boston Bastard Brigade, Wicked Anime, 42's Anime Reviews, and Scarlet Rhapsody team up for a super-deluxe No Borders No Race. The good (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, Parasyte, Haikyū!!), the bad (Super Sonico, Cross Ange, Shonen Hollywood), and the just-plain ugly

Kunihiko Ikuhara has lost his marbles. That is the only explanation I have for why his latest show, Yurikuma Arashi, is the way it is. After watching the first three episodes, I found myself not having the slightest clue what

King Baby Duck pays tribute to the late ORIGA, before going head-on with the recent controversy involving the New England Patriots. The new FXX comedy Man Seeking Woman treads familiar comedic territory, and hear which Wii titles that never made

Satellina's premise is pretty simple: three different colored particles are on the screen. You can only touch the green ones, and not bump into either the red or yellow particles in order to avoid starting the level over. As the

King Baby Duck returns from New York City, where he shares his thoughts on the Broadway production of It's Only A Play, starring Martin Short and Stockard Channing, and how he found one of Osamu Tezuka's final works at a

Oh how we cheered a couple years ago. When news broke out that a new Sailor Moon series was to be created to coincide the original anime's 20th anniversary the anime world shook with anticipation. Would it capture the essence