The anime adaptation of Sakamoto Days has been eagerly awaited by fans of the popular manga series. Staff member Satoshi Sakai recently made a comment on X that provides insight into the difficulties that the anime studio, TMS Entertainment, faces behind the scenes, especially with regard to animating the show's dramatic action scenes.
These worries were heightened by the recent Sakamoto Days episode, which disclosed that 23 distinct production studios worked on the show. The sheer volume of contributors raises concerns about the anime's staff availability and timing according to screenrant.?
Sakai claims that the storyboards and layouts for Sakamoto Days episode four's second half were only "partially" finished. Sakamoto Days' enormous production crew is one of the main causes for concern. The anime seems to be outsourcing production on an unprecedented scale, with 23 separate studios named for a single episode
Reacting to the production, one wrote on X, ¡°It pisses me off how many mid series are getting amazing adaptations then you got OPM S3 And Sakamoto days getting shafted with bad production.¡±
?Another added, ¡°If this person is to be believed then crunch is already affecting the production, but I do agree with the sentiment since I think a lot of Sakamoto Days fans are crying over nothing, the anime doesn't look bad at all.¡±
Yuto Suzuki is a Japanese manga artist and author of the Sakamoto Days series. As of January 2025, its chapters were compiled into 20 tank¨bon volumes, and it has been serialized in Shueisha's sh¨nen manga magazine Weekly Sh¨nen Jump since November 2020. In the name of love, Taro Sakamoto, formerly the greatest hitman of all time, retired. He must struggle to defend his cherished family, though, when his past catches up with him.
You can watch Sakamoto Days on Netflix.
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