I'm camp tanteiii-kun. I thought Hibiki was the worst winner of Taisho, but Astra takes the crown for now. It's not that it isn't good, it's quite thrilling. But I think Sket Dance plays into his strength many times better than Astra did. Astra tone is very inconsistent. On one hand you have a sci-fi adventure, a "murder?" mystery, a conspiracy and a gag slice of life manga. The very foundation is too shaky, the genres don't mesh very well together. It's too light-hearted for a murder mystery and too tense for a slice of life, too much backstory detail for a drama and to simplistic for a sci-fi. The story got weight down by the attempt to keep the elements together and ended up being loaded with too much exposition segment, too much telling than showing. No element is truly very well done. Lack of focus truly hurts when horrible events like losing an arm feel inconsequential at the end. I like Astra but I liked Sket Dance way more. Shinohara really did plan out his story well with both comics have terrific moments of climax but Astra flashback and lengthy story expositions are just a chore, feel extremely out of place. The Sket Dance format of backstory arch of the week should have play out well very here with the "trap inside a room together" kind of murder mystery but it never got developed organically and the backstories are too light hearted for a murder mystery. Astra is a beautiful mess, but it should never have won Taisho. I think it's most apt to compare it to The Promised Neverland. The tension, twist, murder mystery, backstory, tone and sense of adventure in that one is almost superior in every way even as the story is very similar in element. Promised Neverland remains very light hearted for such a sombre story yet have never lost its stake and tension. Brilliant idea, mediocre execution. Also, the sci-fi element is rather inconsequential and sometime quite convenient. For example, the light side dark side planet should have generated a permanent storm on a rocky body with atmosphere as one side is heated and the other cool, the difference in temperature would generate huge difference in pressure, creating a flow from the hot side to the cold side and back. The area in between should still experience that wind all the time and most importantly if you land in the side where the wind from the heated side are blowing into, you'll be roasted and if you land on the other side, the wind would be freezing cold. He's clearly very inspired by science fiction, but it's not that well done, and wasn't good enough to carry the story in my opinion.