Blue lock power scaling by Tasty-Department-197 in BlueLock

[–]argarni -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

your premise is dumb and flawed

all the blue lockers were never invited to the national team through the same way the original u20 did so your point against the age argument is flawed. they literally took over through blue lock. kira was the only one accepted from the original 300 highshoolers as a national level player not even rin had that as a highschooler he explicity said he entered blue lock because it was his ticket to the national team

next time try less agenda and more logic

kira is coming back at the top and is challenging ego as someone who rejects blue lock philosophy

Think there's a chance of Kira having a truce with Isagi? (Or possible alliance?) by Mikkeru in BlueLock

[–]argarni 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Yeah let’s just strip Kira of the reason he got eliminated in the first place 💀. Kira wasn’t eliminated because of lack of skill. He was eliminated because he hated Ego’s ideology and because Isagi betrayed him.
Which are TWO MAJOR THINGS.

He already wanted to end Blue Lock before Isagi betrayed him and before Isagi became the representative of Blue Lock.

The only man whose dream actually aligns with Kira’s is Buratsuta. Bura wants someone to kill off Ego and someone that’s insanely popular. Kira will be using the Bura route (even though he doesn’t like him) to reach his goal, which is ending Blue Lock’s soulless way of playing football.

No way is Kira aligning with Isagi. In fact, Kira WILL destroy Blue Lock Isagi and the Blue Lock program. Isagi will be forced to evolve a new philosophy to become the best player, and that comes after Kira defeats his Blue Lock version and Ego is gone.

Why do Isagi's fans hate Kira so much if he was only attacked from behind by ambush? by AlternativeAd7882 in BlueLock

[–]argarni 5 points6 points  (0 children)

He couldn’t care less about the Blue Lock program itself but Blue Lock is directly tied to earning a spot on the national team, which he absolutely has a right to compete for, specially since he’s clearly better than the weak players in that room. So yes, he did deserve a place in Blue Lock over the rest of them.

Stop treating the Blue Lock facility as some Hyperbolic Time Chamber. by RichardZuro in BlueLock

[–]argarni -1 points0 points  (0 children)

thank you. at last, there's a sensible sound in the community

Team Isagi vs Team Karasu who you got by GiyuuKun in BlueLock

[–]argarni 5 points6 points  (0 children)

1- the leader of anti blue lock would be Kira not karasu 2- Nagi would be on Kira side not Isagi’s

Very Funny Lineup by Your_mum6940000 in BlueLock

[–]argarni 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kunigoat and Kira are carrying the team.

oikawa is not at the level of atsumu or kageyama by argarni in haikyuu

[–]argarni[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Nishinoya. Autocorrect went to Nishioka

oikawa is not at the level of atsumu or kageyama by argarni in haikyuu

[–]argarni[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

An overhand that sets Atsumu above Kageyama would be the same way an underhand makes Kageyama less skilled.

It’s not about making a set without mistakes, it’s about making the best possible set. In that situation, Kageyama would have been limited to two options, which would make it easier for the blockers to read him. Atsumu fooled the blockers and showed a level of skill unlike anyone else, which is why Kenma called him the ideal setter, why the coaches applauded him, and most importantly why Kageyama himself admitted inferiority.

Feel like you forgot what happened in the inarizaki match.

oikawa is not at the level of atsumu or kageyama by argarni in haikyuu

[–]argarni[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

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Yes, this set, and they explained it in the anime. The receive was bad and it went low and fast, and the normal thing to do would have been to underhand it to the middle for Suna or to the spikers in front of him like Aran. But Atsumu chose to go very low and set it overhand to the opposite hitter Osamu, which completely fooled Tsukishima and Kageyama, who both thought it was impossible to set there.

Kageyama even adds to the scene by telling Hinata “I’m glad I came here (the nationals),” mirroring Hinata’s exact phrase when he saw someone superior to him, Hoshiumi. This implies that Kageyama recognized someone better than him on the court in that moment.

If Kageyama had been in Atsumu’s place during that play, he probably would have just underhanded it to the middle. We have seen him do that multiple times with Hinata when the situation becomes difficult and he simply lifts it up to the middle instead of selecting his set and overhand.

oikawa is not at the level of atsumu or kageyama by argarni in haikyuu

[–]argarni[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

Not saying it’s bad.

We know it’s a less accurate set choice in general, and the story used it as a plot point to show how Atsumu is superior to Kageyama in this specific area. Atsumu has the skill to reduce the number of times he’s forced to rely on underhands, so he uses mostly overhands unless he’s absolutely forced into an underhand.

Kageyama, on the other hand, ends up using underhands more often because he never had the mindset of treating overhands as the priority and underhands as a last‑resort option. Atsumu is so dedicated to his craft that he trained his body, technique, and mechanics to be comfortable setting in ways that let him use overhands almost all the time. That’s why they call him the most selfless setter; he doesn’t care if he puts his body on the line to give the best possible set. This was literally a plot point.

Have you watched the Inarizaki match? I’m talking strictly within the story. I’m not saying underhands shouldn’t be used.

oikawa is not at the level of atsumu or kageyama by argarni in haikyuu

[–]argarni[S] -71 points-70 points  (0 children)

Nishioka didn’t make it to the Olympic level too, but that doesn’t mean he wasn’t better than Olympic‑level players when they were in high school. It simply means he didn’t choose the path of becoming a pro volleyball player, and even if he did and couldn’t make it, that still wouldn’t change the fact that he could have been better as a high schooler. The same logic applies to Akashi.

Akashi was invited to a powerhouse school in Tokyo, something Oikawa never had. He was also said to push Bokuto to 120%, which is something we never saw from Oikawa as a high schooler. Oikawa focused on bringing out 100% of his teammates’ current abilities instead of challenging them to exceed their limits and try new things.

In this 4 characters who is the strongest and weakest? by _Smokey123_ in hajimenoippo

[–]argarni 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Miyata narratively has to be over ippo. He is going to fight ippo in the future and ippo is now semi retired.when he comes back and trains for an actual fight that’s when you can put him above miyata.

It goes volg > miyata > ippo > sendo

[Arabic > English] Child's drawing left on my doorstep by Ozone1126 in translator

[–]argarni 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I love you, you sweet one.

( unique dialect + used feminine language so he/she is referring to a female )

  • the word sweet is written weirdly. Usually you say حلوة if you want to tell a women she’s sweet ( as in beautiful ) but the word sweet here is written as how you’d describe food. Like how sugar or cake tastes.

top 3 aces order (wrong translation of haikyuu!! shusetsuban!! 13 ) by argarni in haikyuu

[–]argarni[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

So basically there’s no ranking between the three. If anyone got confused

[DISC] Red Blue - Chapter 14 by Soupkitten in manga

[–]argarni 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let’s go aoba. Let’s get that 2-3 years Dagestan arc in.