After the hugely successful Great Pretender, WIT Studio is ready to return with a new, ambitious original anime titled Vivy: The song of Fluorite Eye and out next April 3rd. The series will air exclusively in Japan, but alongside Great Pretender and Attack of the Giants, arriving on Netflix is ​​definitely plausible.

The anime "Vivy: Fluorite Eye's Song" was announced last January, and the guys at WIT shared the first teaser trailer on February 5th, promising the impending arrival of new information. Today it was confirmed that the history of two industry giants was made Nagatsuki caps (Re: Zero) ed Eiji Umehara (ChäoS; child), and that the direction is entrusted to none other than Shinpei Ezaki (Blue Exorcist, Guilty Crown). For the music, the studio chose to rely on it Satoru Kousaki, Composer of Lucky Star and Beastars.

Fortunately, in addition to the first trailer, the synopsis of the anime was also revealed, which was previously wrapped in complete darkness. According to the official website, the story begins in Nearland, an amusement park where dreams, hopes and science meet. This is where Vivy was born, the first AI with human characteristics designed to entertain visitors by singing on a huge stage every day. One day, another AI named Matsumoto appears before her and tells her that she has traveled 100 years in the past to "correct the future, and..." Stop the bloody human-robot war that has resulted in unprecedented destructionVivy and Matsumoto's journey begins here.

The anime seems to want to tackle important topics and seems to be inspired by several very successful science fiction works such as Blade Runner and the latest video game, Nier: Automata. In view of this, WIT seems to have great confidence in the project has already announced the adaptation in a number of light novels entitled Vivy: Prototype and available from April 30, 2021.

About the Author

Sweety Otaku

One of the best parts of watching anime is how many times a show can surprise you. Sometimes for good, sometimes for bad. But if the Otaku know one thing, it's that anything is possible.

View All Articles