
Chillin' in Another World with Level 2 Super Cheat Powers
4.2
Animation
Sci-Fi & Fantasy
Action & Adventure
2024
24 min
TV-14
The Magical Kingdom of Klyrode summons hundreds of heroes from other worlds every year to fight in their war against the Dark One and his army of powerful demons. Banaza is one of those heroes, summoned from the Royal Capital Paluma, but something’s not right—Banaza is only an average merchant. He has no magic, no fighting ability, and his stats are abysmal. Worse, a mishap leaves him unable to return home! Rejected as a hero and stranded in another world, abandoned to the far reaches of the kingdom by a cruel king who just wants him gone, Banaza’s fate looks pretty bleak. But what will happen once the failed hero candidate finds himself with super cheat powers once he hits level two?
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"I started Chillin' in Another World With Level 2 Super Cheat Powers thinking that it would be a ripoff of KONOSUBA and the like. Before I expand on that, I'll say that the animation is smooth and the humor is funny. There aren't that many poignant dramatic moments, but the few that are there are well-executed. The character design is definitely geared towards creating eye candy for the target young male viewers, but many of the characters look a little boxy in their proportions.
Going back to my first point, though, which I can't elaborate on without SPOILERS, the premise certainly sounds like a recipe for a generic harem fantasy comedy isekai, and the show plays around with that concept for a while before settling on something completely different. Over time the characters' relationships actually develop and mature, and the main cast grows into, essentially, a peaceful, idyllic commune. Main characters Flio and Rhys go from being two characters pushed together by anime convention into a happily married couple. The female knights go from fawning over Flio to developing their own interests, including, in Ballirossa's case, a new love interest. The villains are ousted from villainhood and join the main cast, not because they're beaten in combat, but because they believe in Flio's dream of peaceful coexistence. Some of the show's themes are handled in an idealistic and unrealistic way, but I enjoy the show's sweet earnestness (except for the VERY UNCOMFORTABLE SA joke in episode 11) and heart, and I enjoy the way it subverts isekai convention without winking at the audience too much or calling attention to it."