Kage No Jitsuryokusha Ni Naritakute- Episode 1 -

His training is absurdly dedicated. He fights thugs at night, swings a wooden sword at passing cars, and studies anatomy solely to know where to strike a vital point. The brilliance of the first ten minutes is how it treats Cid’s delusion with deadpan seriousness. When he gets hit by a truck (complete with glowing light and a passing mention of “isekai tropes”), it’s not tragic. It’s inevitable. Of course he dies trying to save a girl from a truck—not out of heroism, but because it looked cool. Cid reincarnates into a world of magic, swords, and noble houses. But where most isekai heroes would seek a quiet life or a harem, Cid sees a playground. His first act? Using his past-life knowledge of physics to amplify magic, creating “nuclear” spells. His second act? Stumbling upon a girl, Alpha, being experimented on by a cult.

Here’s where episode one pulls its smartest trick. Cid doesn’t actually know if the cult is real. He makes up an elaborate story about the "Diabolos Cult" controlling history from the shadows, simply because it fits his fantasy. Alpha, desperate and believing every word, mistakes his improv for omniscience. The moment Cid realizes she’s buying it—his internal monologue is pure gold: “Wait, she actually believes me? …Awesome.” Director Kazuya Nakanishi and studio Nexus understand the assignment. The animation isn’t just fluid; it’s expressive . Cid’s eyes switch from dead-fish boredom to manic glitter the second a dramatic monologue is required. The fight scenes are gorgeously choreographed—especially the final sequence where a young Cid (now Shadow) obliterates a group of kidnappers with a single, whispered spell. Kage no Jitsuryokusha ni Naritakute- Episode 1

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