Anime, manga, and games, with a take · A Yukimedia publication

← all stories animereview 1 sources · Jun 23 ·

Nippon Sangoku Ends Its First Season With a Bloody Coup

The finale cements Nippon Sangoku's documentary-style storytelling as both its greatest strength and a rare point of friction when character deaths are reported with the same indifference as any other event.

Key Facts

  • The season finale of Nippon Sangoku: The Three Nations of the Crimson Sun ends with Taira betraying Aoteru, executing Wajima, and imprisoning Aoteru.
  • Aoteru and Yoshitsune win a decisive victory by luring Wajima's army into a trap using prefabricated cars from the pre-apocalypse.
  • The review praises the show's grand scale but notes that the detached narration slightly mutes the personal impact of character deaths.
  • The review calls Nippon Sangoku one of the best anime of the year and demands a second season.

Reporting from 1 source: Anime News Network.

Nippon Sangoku Ends Its First Season With a Bloody Coup

The season finale of Nippon Sangoku: The Three Nations of the Crimson Sun sees Aoteru and his allies crush Wajima's army with a trap of abandoned cars, only for Taira to betray them, execute Wajima, and imprison Aoteru. The review praises the grand scale but notes the detached narration slightly mutes the personal impact.

Kaku's final stratagem-a feint that lures Wajima's army into a mountain of prefabricated cars from the pre-apocalypse-gives Aoteru and Yoshitsune a decisive victory. But within minutes, Taira uses peace talks as a pretext to burn everything down. Wajima is executed by her own people, the Emperor is reduced to a figurehead, and Aoteru lands in prison. The review notes that the show's deliberate narrative distance, while intentional, makes these losses feel slightly detached compared to the episode's sweeping political consequences. Still, it calls Nippon Sangoku one of the best anime of the year and demands a second season.

Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.

Sources