2.43: Seiin High School Boys Volleyball Team

Alt title: 2.43: Seiin Koukou Danshi Volley-bu

TV (12 eps)
3.283 out of 5 from 2,059 votes
Rank #11,178

Kimichika Haijima leaves Tokyo behind and returns to his childhood home where he’s reunited with an old friend, Yuni Kuroba. The two become an ace pair on the volleyball court but at the last tournament before graduation a fight causes the duo to split. Now reunited in high school, they are forced to mend their relationship in order to achieve their dreams of making it to the top.

Source: Funimation

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Reviews

TracksuitYato
6

If you play volleyball then, like me, you're probably going to have a hard time finding this show believable. It's pretty clear that the creators were just trying to ride the volleyball hype train rather than present this sport seriously. Ball physics are wack, it barely even looks like they exist. They have no effect on their surroundings. They have no idea how a ball bounces, or sounds it seems. Some of the sound effects they use don't usually sound like ones heard while playing volleyball. They sound like they belong more in an action RPG than a volleyball match.  There aren't many strategies addressed or explained in this show. The only one I can think of is the blockers marking one person because no one else can spike the ball. The huge effort it takes for teams to come together and play ball well isn't really addressed, it's just hey-let's-spike-a-ball-around-with-no-blockers-because-that-really-helps-every-single-person's-gameplay. In other words, the research required to make a show believable is incredibly lacking in this, and I love volleyball too much to overlook it. The timing is also wack, and it makes it difficult to connect to the characters or care about the matches they play. In the show they say that one person shouldn't play the game by themselves, but then proceed to make matches all about one or two people, which I don't understand?? There are six people on the court, use them and give them recognition please. Making the story about only two people playing the game is hypocritical.  I think they missed the mark when forming the team dynamic. Players do not play with each other just to further the position of one player in life. Players play with each other because they want to play volleyball. Wishing for more attention to be shed on the other players on the Seiin team. There are more than several of which I don't even know their names. I only enjoyed two things consistantly: the opening and Kuroba's cousin, who only doesn't appear very often. She has spunk and reminds people to take their dreams seriously, and I like her character. 

Franconator
5

The problem with 2.43 is that it’s a sports anime that’s trying hard to not look like a sports anime. There’s some volleyball that happens here and there’s some strategy talk when the show’s in the mood to dive into it, but because it’s almost embarrassed to be what it really is, 2.43 overcompensates by leaning so far into its drama and character angst, that you start wondering why anyone would keep playing the game if it brings them this much suffering. The premise was supposed to be the hook that set it apart from everyone else: selfish star player learns to become human thanks to volleyball. Instead, what we get is this: selfish star player learns to love volleyball thanks to side characters who let him walk all over them. The only resolution they can think of to address the angst is to simply let the angst be, which is why characters sometimes break out into bursts of high emotion without any warning. It’s also why the show starts to resemble a soap opera more than a sports anime at several points, only to switch gears suddenly when it remembers it’s supposed to be a sports anime. In its attempt to try and do more with its material, 2.43 gets lost in its drama and ends up looking terribly half-assed. Problems are met with bigger problems that show up to beat the first problems into submission. Signing up to play a game together almost feels like a marriage contract with an extreme focus on the “’till death do us part” part. Volleyball is a hard sell in other words, and from there, it’s just an ugly stockpiling of emotions and drama tropes that are supposed to give some depth, but morph this into an exhausting slog instead. There’s a sob story for every named character in this show – injury problems, height limitations, shitty personalities, overall dumbness – but even if it all gets to be too much, we’re still somehow expected to just nod along when we’re presented with the half-baked camaraderie and plot road bumps. The story moves in reasonable ways sometimes, but because 2.43 takes shortcuts to these end points, it’s panting and all out of breath by the time it gets to them. Watching this feels a lot like watching someone try to put a puzzle together by jamming some pieces together and forcing them all to fit. There’s a picture it’s trying to make for you and it’s something we catch a glimpse of early on, but the process of seeing it all come together is so forceful, that your head just might start to ring from all the bashing 2.43 inflicts on you. It’s a “my way or the highway” type of show with hardly anyone to cheer for – which, if you think about it, is already quite the incredible feat on its own considering this is still supposed to be a sports anime.

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