Kind of get where you are coming from. It's hard to understand the context of a different culture in addition to what cultural norms 30 years ago in the 1990s.Am I the exception in not liking this at all? I wasn't exactly hoping for another Teppu, but this doesn't really look that good even with tempered expectations.
Yeah, just from the first 10 or 20 pages. You can really tell what generation the author grew up in. This might’ve been Published in the 1990s, but the guy writing it definitely grew up in a less than forgiving point in Japan.Kind of get where you are coming from. It's hard to understand the context of a different culture in addition to what cultural norms 30 years ago in the 1990s.
You could probably go back to the 1980's too, if not further back. Hindu squats are the more lauded exercise amongst pro wrestlers of that era, with guys like Ric Flair and Iron Sheik boasting of doing hundreds in one go. Hindu pushups wouldn't be any more exotic.Alright, thoughts and questions -
Did people know what Hindu Pushups were in 1990s Japan?
How common were women in martial arts and combat sports in the 1990s?
Was it normal for a gym teacher to hit a student repeatedly without worrying about getting fired?
Was it normal to hit your kid like that?
Mr. Abe, you forgot to take your daily dose of buckshot.what a selfish girl.
What she needs is a man to fall in love with, then she'll forget all about this silly business.
definitely calling it: that spiky haired punk is in love with herwhat a selfish girl.
What she needs is a man to fall in love with, then she'll forget all about this silly business.
HOLY SHIT dat is some cool pro wrestling lore!!! Makes a lot of sense to considering it was around the 1980 Shooto MMA hit the Japanese sceneYou could probably go back to the 1980's too, if not further back. Hindu squats are the more lauded exercise amongst pro wrestlers of that era, with guys like Ric Flair and Iron Sheik boasting of doing hundreds in one go. Hindu pushups wouldn't be any more exotic.
I know in Japan there was a kakutougi boom during the 1990's, where all things fighting and fighting related experienced a renaissance of sorts. I think, as this manga shows in the second chapter, a lot of girls and young women were inspired by female pro wrestlers, leading to a lot of aspirants. In actual combat sports, though, women's presence not nearly as common and overshadowed by the men. I think there just weren't enough women to make up a decent division for a while.