Watch fairytail fina series

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Sorry, Fairy Tail: Final Series is not available on New Zealand Netflix, but you can unlock it right now in New Zealand and start watching! With a few simple steps you can change your Netflix region to a country like Japan and start watching Japanese Netflix, which includes Fairy Tail: Final Series.

Fairy Tail’s final season left me disappointed. I especially enjoyed Fairy Tail Zero, and the Tataros arc while full of plot armor was still decently enjoyable. This season had its moments, but ultimately I didn’t enjoy it as those 2. It also left me confused, as there are many plot points that don’t add up, or are just thrown out there to either make the season more interesting, or keep the viewers interested without basis.Story: The beginning of the final season is essentially the Avatar Arc, and at first they look like the main villains of the season, but they turn out to be incredibly weak and just fodder. You could skip those episodes and miss absolutely nothing. Ultimately, the main villains are the Spriggan 12, who act as Zeref’s personal army. They all have insanely powerful abilities, and apparently are apart of the Alvarez Empire, which is extremely wealthy and powerful (but for some reason we don’t hear anything about them previously. You’d think such a powerful empire would at least have been known well earlier in the series). They basically battle against Ishgar in addition to millions of other soliders from the Alvarez Empire (this all happens because Zeref is bored, I guess and wants Mavis. Great reasoning there by the smartest main character in the series). Many other guilds join in helping Fairy Tail, notable ones include Sabertooth and Mermaid Heal. Animation: The animation is solid. Character designs are pretty good. I like Ajeel’s design, and God Serena’s is interesting. Not much to complain about here. Sound: I’ve never been crazy about the Fairy Tail soundtrack throughout the series, but it does fit the story and the theme of the guild. So while I may not be a huge fan of it, it does fit the series pretty well.Characters: If you’re interested in the final series, chances are you probably already know who the main characters are, what their personalities are, and what there relations are with other characrers. So I’ll use this section to talk about the Spriggan 12. I’m not a fan of them. Many of them have either have bland and forgettable personalities (outside of the eccentric God Serena, though we barely see any of his fights and Wall Eehto), or are extremely overpowered and use their abilities poorly (Jacob and Brandish are notable in this). Irene and August have the most overpowered abilities, and have their fights end due to plot armor. This whole series was poorly written.Overall: This season disappointed me a ton. Too many things don’t make sense (how does Erza struggle to defeat Ajeel who’s one of the weaker Spriggan 12 members then suddenly punch a meteor controlled by Irene) and the new villains are not interesting and lack character development. It feels like this season was rushed. I understand the anime tried to stay consistent with the manga (which I read and also didn’t like in terms of the final season), but for such a popular anime to close out this way, especially when some seasons were great, it’s disappointing.

the fanservice is really annoying in his anime, it should have the ecchi tag, my god every time lucy or any "busty" character is on screen they’re ALWAYS on revealing clothing and somehow the story has to have lucy somehow lose her clothes or somehow get ripped or stolen by someone or the enemy. its really annoying how fanservice especially lucy is constantly shoved in your face with as much revealing as possible without being rated R+18 it might as well be soft core, they show as much skin as possible without revealing any "major parts" and only a string of line censoring, and every girl has the jiggle physics with the camera zoomed in like a pervert focusing the parts. and beach episodes and mostly girls in their underwear or in bikinis fighting, if they are not wearing it, its guaranted that you will see them atleast once in a bikini, even if they don’t come across as the type. i bet half the cast doesnt even wear underwear they just go full commando for the viewers. i dont mind fanservice bit and there if its on the background but ive never seen a shonen or show be this much fanservice without being a fanservice anime focused. its so soft core that it feels its in the wrong genre. i didnt start to watch this show with the intention of being fanservice focus. but years went by and story became 2nd.  its a cheap tactic to draw viewers and illusion of having a plot. oh and the story sucks go figure. and the characters, potential but wasted for plot armor and asspulls and stayed 1 dimensional.  man this series fell far down, is dissaponting how cheap it got. and the end was horribly cheap. and the artstyle of any anime looking related to this somehow always has to have a busty blonde shoved in your face without being fully naked and just having a string of censure line cause you dont want it to be R18+ no offense to any blondes but i dont like blondes looks wise, it just specifially irked me how much it was being forced down my throat, while being cliche with the "sexy" blonde type. animation is good no shade thrown at the animators (mostly), is the manga at fault. god this annoyed me 

Equally important is the way that it successfully carries its series-long themes through to the very last moment, which is much more complicated than it sounds like. From the very first episode, “a place to belong” has been a major component of the story, with Lucy ostensibly just looking for a guild to join but really looking to find someplace where she can be accepted and happy in a way she hasn’t been since her mother’s death. Although she later finds post-mortem reconciliation with her estranged father, at the time she feels adrift and without family, and that’s what Natsu’s immediate acceptance of her helps her to find. Over the course of the series, she and Natsu specifically form a tight bond, one that extends to a degree to the rest of the guild (watching Lucy befriend Erza, Levy, and Wendy is equally important), and the separations from him Lucy endures hurt her in ways that nothing else can. Although Natsu isn’t someone who expresses that kind of softer emotion particularly well (and I’d almost say that he’s uncomfortable with them), the final scenes of this episode show that he’s gone through the same issues, even if he was the one who initiated the separation. When he tells Lucy that whatever he was going to say doesn’t matter because “they’re going to be together forever anyway,” the implication for the romantics is that he cares about her just as much as she does him, and that in his mind he doesn’t need to say it yet, because he’s done with the separations. He’s always been more of an actions than words guy, anyway.

The final season of the series kicked off last October, and with it ending at Episode 328 this will mark a year of the final season. Although the final episode count took anime fans by surprise, it has been running for quite a while now in retrospect. If you’re itching for more

Yet another holy grail of anime franchises enters the fray, Fairy Tail has a lot going for it. Featuring a colourful cast of characters, the series’ final animation season sees the journey of the now-disbanded Fairy Tail guild and its former members going about their daily lives. Though the guild may be in tatters, Natsu Dragneel still strives to reunite the guild members. To make matters worse, Natsu faces his greatest trial yet, a massive invasion by the Alvarez Empire. With Happy and Lucy Heartfilia in tow, Natsu ventures onwards, for the glory of Fairy Tail.

Viewers can tune in to Animax (Astro CH 715) and catch Fairy Tail: Final Series and Yo-Kai Watch via Astro’s On-Demand service and Astro Go (available in Malaysia only) from now till 14 August 2021.

Season 9 of the anime series was directed by Shinji Ishihara and like previous seasons follows the adventures of Natsu Dragneel and Lucy Heartfilia of the fictional guild Fairy Tail. The ninth season has two story arcs: the first seven episodes continue the “Avatar” arc, which adapts from the final chapter of the 49th volume to the second-to-last chapter of the 51st volume of the Fairy Tail manga, whereas the remaining 44 episodes form the “Alvarez” arc, which adapts material from the last chapter of the 51st volume to the manga’s conclusion, depicting the guild’s war with the militaristic Alvarez Empire, and Natsu’s final battle with his adversaries Zeref and Acnologia.

Erza stands up to fight for her friends who died to protect her. Princess Hisui watches the Grand Magic Games and waits for its final outcome.

Additionally, please keep this in mind. Although this may be a rather significant moment in the Fairy Tail series – what with it being the final season and everything – there isn’t much I can say about it. There is only one thing I feel needs to be addressed:

You got a lot of time to spare and feel like binging a full 328 episode, nine-season anime series? Australian anime publisher Madman Entertainment has recently made the final English dubbed episodes of Fairy Tail available through their AnimeLab video-on-demand streaming service. You can watch the entire series now either with the original Japanese audio OR the newer English dub commissioned by Funimation Entertainment.

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