![]() ![]() isn't exactly villainous, but does have questionable morality. * Monsuno can fight and use special moves autonomously. * Jinja is good at fixing stuff while Bren is good at hacking stuff. * Chase, Jinja and Bren know how to rough it, but they are almost out of supplies. There are also some things we learn beyond how Monsuno work in the pilot episode: Monsuno are likely considered WMD's, and if somebody you funded said "I'm gonna make one of these WMD's for my teenage son," you'd probably flip out, too. would have a strong reaction to Jeredy's work. It's also easy to understand why S.T.O.R.M. Had he been allowed to finish his plan uninterrupted, he might have gotten Chase to cooperate better and have a different sort of story. If there's anyone who got good character development that I sympathize with, it's Jon Ace. Maybe it's due to the fact that TWO episodes premiered and I have yet to see the second one. However, I don't really get that much from Chase, Jinja and Bren just yet. In Monsuno, it starts with all hell breaking loose.Īnother purpose of the pilot episode is to get to know the characters and sympathize with them. It feels less like Pokemon in this sense In Pokemon and other shows like Beyblade and Yugioh!, the subject of the series is presented as already concrete and well-known. It feels a lot like the first episode of Mobile Suit Gundam where the son stumbles into his father's greatest creation and somehow gets it to work well enough to escape the clutches of his enemy. Now, as for the episode itself, it at least feels like a pilot episode: The characters are introduced and the conflict gets underway. Meanwhile, at the EEEVIL fortress of.EEEVIL, a goatee'd man watches footage of Lock and laughs.EEEVILLY!
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