I think you are misunderstanding Denken here. He is specifically saying that being powerful and feared isn't enough. Someone in the position to lead, does not need to be the most powerful or the most feared, but instead need to capture the hearts of the many. An inspiration to follow, because any single individual, can never stand up to, or do as much as a whole nation of people rallying behind such a person. I don't know how powerful Himmel was, but that was never why he had the title of "Hero" IMO. I think there is a reason why we never actually have gotten a good look at his abilities and such, at this point in the series. Because it was how he inspired people and always took up the front, that really made a difference. I mean, he was probably very strong... but in reality that mattered less than how he carried himself and inspired people.
Ehre might have the most mana on her team, but Wirbel is the more effective fighter. It's the same lesson Frieren tried to teach Fern at the start of the arc - mana isn't everything.
Most mana and better control and firepower by far, but Wirbel just uses magic solely for the purpose of winning fights and wars so he's more effective yes.
Always looking forward to your reactions to Frieren, love the edits! 9:44 Kanne is actually infusing a small amount of mana into each water body in order to bait the Stille toward specific water holes. She can't create water out of nothing; she has to infuse mana into water to cast her magic.
The Bat and the Cat. Really excellent reaction. I love when Lawine froze the lake, the Bat's eyes go super wide, looks like to the max. The exam arc gets better with each episode, but it's not all action. A great deal of story is told about the characters and their backstories. You will end this season with a deep appreciation for many of these individuals who become reoccurring characters at various places and times.
I fell in love with Übel long time ago before this story was anime so stay away from her. She belongs to me. Unfortunately as in the Black Widow spider, the much littler male must first put the female to sleep, and then very quietly and nervously approach her for mating. If she wakes while he is there, he is food. Same with Übel but danger is always an incentive for Romance. If the guy will not risk his life for his mate, what value does he have?
The Japanese VAs did a surprisingly good job at pronouncing German words. They understood that "Lawine" is pronounced "lavin-uh", that "Fern" is "f-eh-rn" and not "f-uh-rn", that "Heiter" is "ha-eeter" and not "hate-ur'...
"In German a W is pronounced as a V so Lawine is Lavine" -- JUST NO. Crappy advise. That this comment got 5 likes by this time is even more infuriating. Even the voice generator for translation of the google translator is a hundredfold better to show the pronunciation has no "v" then this advise would suggest.
@@DrWolfPhoenix I'm a German native speaker as well. I thought about to write a lengthy reply. But in essence it is very complicated. The advise the other commenter has given has a kernel of truth but is mostly wrong over all. There is an overlap of the 'v'-sound in certain English pronounciation of certain dialects in England in certain words that is very near to what a 'w'-sound in certain German words in certain German dialects would sound like. As an example the word "victory" when spoken in some English dialect would produce a 'w' sound pretty analog to 'w' in German words with a specific arrangement of the consonant 'w' and vowels into a syllable, but not all! So when you take the English 'v' in the number "five" this 'v' sound is nothing alike the german 'w' and there is my grieve with such an advice (and the 'v'-pound in grieve and advice and many more will not line up). And even in this example with the word "victory" doesn't cover 'w'- sound like in the German word "wen" but rather if anything the 'w' sound in the German word "wenn" (you see one more consonant and the 'w' has a sound shift when pronounced by a native German speaker). As said in the beginning the TLDR it is complex and such a "fit all size" advice in my view creates misunderstanding then it helps. Well languages are fascinating perhaps you read up the wiki article for german dialects? See the variety there is with high and low german that can be further distinguished into dozen bigger dialect groups and then subdivide into hundreds of varieties of local dialects.
@@Airwave2k2 I'll be honest, I hear no difference between the v sounds for advice, victory, grieve or five. And the only difference I hear between "wen" and "wenn" is for the vowel (I can speak both English and German but neither language is my mother tongue). Can you give me the IPA letters for the different sounds you can distinguish? I would like to learn more about that. Or maybe you know a website that talks about this regional variation? (Only talking about high German here, since it is what learners are taught).
I think you are misunderstanding Denken here.
He is specifically saying that being powerful and feared isn't enough. Someone in the position to lead, does not need to be the most powerful or the most feared, but instead need to capture the hearts of the many.
An inspiration to follow, because any single individual, can never stand up to, or do as much as a whole nation of people rallying behind such a person.
I don't know how powerful Himmel was, but that was never why he had the title of "Hero" IMO. I think there is a reason why we never actually have gotten a good look at his abilities and such, at this point in the series. Because it was how he inspired people and always took up the front, that really made a difference. I mean, he was probably very strong... but in reality that mattered less than how he carried himself and inspired people.
Ehre might have the most mana on her team, but Wirbel is the more effective fighter. It's the same lesson Frieren tried to teach Fern at the start of the arc - mana isn't everything.
Most mana and better control and firepower by far, but Wirbel just uses magic solely for the purpose of winning fights and wars so he's more effective yes.
I love the added touches you do to the editing, making the bird fly into the video from offscreen was cute =3
Always looking forward to your reactions to Frieren, love the edits!
9:44 Kanne is actually infusing a small amount of mana into each water body in order to bait the Stille toward specific water holes. She can't create water out of nothing; she has to infuse mana into water to cast her magic.
These reaction videos have such nice editing and commentary. Seriously underrated
Loved "Mana for Beginners".
Whoever is fighting Fern is about to find out what ZoltrAK-47 is...
Lol ... Very neat joke
For the breakdancing golem, it was in episode 5 at 17:36-17:42 when we were introduced to Stark.
The Bat and the Cat. Really excellent reaction. I love when Lawine froze the lake, the Bat's eyes go super wide, looks like to the max. The exam arc gets better with each episode, but it's not all action. A great deal of story is told about the characters and their backstories. You will end this season with a deep appreciation for many of these individuals who become reoccurring characters at various places and times.
The demon bird's name, Geisel, means Hostage by the way which makes sense with the way they hunt.
Great arc. Ubel is indeed a standout character design among the many good characters they introduced here.
I fell in love with Übel long time ago before this story was anime so stay away from her. She belongs to me. Unfortunately as in the Black Widow spider, the much littler male must first put the female to sleep, and then very quietly and nervously approach her for mating. If she wakes while he is there, he is food. Same with Übel but danger is always an incentive for Romance. If the guy will not risk his life for his mate, what value does he have?
It's surprising how good this show is at investing you into its side characters, cuz there's a ton of them and you somehow end up loving them all???
Love your guys reactions, can't wait for you to watch the rest of this Arc!
In German a W is pronounced as a V so Lawine is Lavine
The Japanese VAs did a surprisingly good job at pronouncing German words. They understood that "Lawine" is pronounced "lavin-uh", that "Fern" is "f-eh-rn" and not "f-uh-rn", that "Heiter" is "ha-eeter" and not "hate-ur'...
"In German a W is pronounced as a V so Lawine is Lavine" -- JUST NO. Crappy advise. That this comment got 5 likes by this time is even more infuriating. Even the voice generator for translation of the google translator is a hundredfold better to show the pronunciation has no "v" then this advise would suggest.
@@Airwave2k2 I got that from a German RUclipsr, you know someone who is anexpert on German words
@@DrWolfPhoenix I'm a German native speaker as well. I thought about to write a lengthy reply. But in essence it is very complicated. The advise the other commenter has given has a kernel of truth but is mostly wrong over all. There is an overlap of the 'v'-sound in certain English pronounciation of certain dialects in England in certain words that is very near to what a 'w'-sound in certain German words in certain German dialects would sound like. As an example the word "victory" when spoken in some English dialect would produce a 'w' sound pretty analog to 'w' in German words with a specific arrangement of the consonant 'w' and vowels into a
syllable, but not all! So when you take the English 'v' in the number "five" this 'v' sound is nothing alike the german 'w' and there is my grieve with such an advice (and the 'v'-pound in grieve and advice and many more will not line up). And even in this example with the word "victory" doesn't cover 'w'- sound like in the German word "wen" but rather if anything the 'w' sound in the German word "wenn" (you see one more consonant and the 'w' has a sound shift when pronounced by a native German speaker). As said in the beginning the TLDR it is complex and such a "fit all size" advice in my view creates misunderstanding then it helps. Well languages are fascinating perhaps you read up the wiki article for german dialects? See the variety there is with high and low german that can be further distinguished into dozen bigger dialect groups and then subdivide into hundreds of varieties of local dialects.
@@Airwave2k2 I'll be honest, I hear no difference between the v sounds for advice, victory, grieve or five. And the only difference I hear between "wen" and "wenn" is for the vowel (I can speak both English and German but neither language is my mother tongue).
Can you give me the IPA letters for the different sounds you can distinguish? I would like to learn more about that. Or maybe you know a website that talks about this regional variation? (Only talking about high German here, since it is what learners are taught).
Thank you for sharing 😊
15:50 maybe we'll get to see the break dancing golem again.
She’s JUST a psycho, it’s fine 🙄 god forbid women have hobbies nowadays 🙄
😂😂😂