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If we're talking solely superhuman combat scenes, yes. Major yes. It's always so weird how we never see characters with super speed actually use it practically in a fight on screen. https://t.co/oZTehHg1EW
@DefinDQFacts Both of whom are recolors of the Dragovian Lord... who ALREADY had a recolour based on Dragonlord in the form of Ultimate Dragon!
It's a hard comparison, because while these games/series are clearly borrowing a lot from each other, the experiences feel so different. But overall, I'd agree with that guy's sign... but with an asterisk in the form of the first respective entries.
So, by saying Dragon WARRIOR Monsters instead of Dragon QUEST Monsters, that limits it to the first two games. So, it stands to reason that they're comparing Pokémon Red & Blue, Gold & Silver, to Dragon Warrior Monsters 1 and 2.
@Snake_RIVER_90 I'm just confused because... what is that game it says she's from? I don't understand... when I google it, all I get is japanese text...
Like, just look at this evolution. Not even just the designs, or the colouring techniques, but the expressions and poses.
Reminder that without these two, the iconic Slime and Mew would look like absolute shit. And yes, that was Mew's original canonical design, Pokemon were drawn AS SPRITES FIRST, not on paper. Sugimori is the one who redesigned them afterwards, giving them the looks we know today.
I think a lot of parallels can be drawn between Akira Toriyama and Ken Sugimori, and their influences on their respective franchises. Similarly, they've also greatly changed their styles over the years, and have tremendous talent for character design.