Tokyo Ghoul-re Review
His transformation back into the (the eyepatch-wearing, centipede-obsessed Kaneki) is terrifying. He smiles as he kills. He accepts his role as the One-Eyed King , not because he wants to rule, but because he realizes the world is a tragedy, and only a monster can end it.
Many fans complained that the anime omitted entire character arcs, reduced complex psychological struggles to montages, and made large portions of the story difficult to follow for anyone who had not already read the manga. In particular, the anime‘s handling of Kaneki’s transition from Haise back to his original self was seen as rushed and emotionally muted compared to the source material. The first season‘s musical score, composed by Yutaka Yamada, remained strong — the opening theme “Asphyxia” by Cö shu Nie and the ending “Half” by Queen Bee are widely praised — but the animation quality in the second half was inconsistent, and fight scenes often lacked the kinetic brutality of the earlier seasons. Tokyo Ghoul-re