Gachiakuta: My Review

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If you treat an object with care a soul will come and inhibit it. That line got me thinking deeply. From the very first episode, I knew it wasn’t going to be your everyday “hero saves the world” kind of story. Nah, this one grabbed me by the throat and said, “Sit down, watch, and prepare to be shocked.”

So the story starts with Rudo — stubborn, hot-headed, and born into a world that already hates him because of who his parents were. He lives in the slums, and the way the society is divided ehn, if you’re from the wrong side, you’re treated like trash — literally. The rich people stay above and throw all their garbage, both things and people, down into this pit. That pit isn’t just a dump o, it’s like a graveyard of forgotten things, and the moment I saw it, I just knew it was going to play a big role later.

then boom one twist I did not see coming. Rudo is framed over a crime he did not commit. You know that sort of betrayal when your chest feels hard? His father figure, who raised him, was murdered and all of a sudden it was his fault. They threw him in the Abyss like he was nothing, branding him a murderer. I was yelling at my screen, “How could they do him like that?!”

This is where it gets nuts: Rudo ought to have died down in the Abyss. However, he turns out to find something different that completely changes everything. He encounters this mysterious man by the name Engine, who takes him into the world of the Janitors. These are not only cleaners o - they are warriors who fight with special weapons which are made of the feelings of trash. Not ordinary swords or guns, the weapons are imbued by feelings, hatred, even the past of what they were before being discarded. Say that is not crazy.

One scene that is still stuck to my head was when Rudo picked his first weapon; it was not smooth or polished. It was crude, practically ugly, but when he swung it you could feel his anger, his hurt, his sense of injustice flow through it. The sound effects, the animation, the heaviness of that moment -- goosebumps all over my body.

And what of the fights? Ah! These Janitors do not swing weapons, though. All wars are psychological. At one point, Rudo is fighting a character capable of manipulating chains made of chain-links that have been broken and discarded shackles. That scene put me on the edge of my seat since it was not a matter of who was stronger but whose feelings were deeper. Watching Rudo scream, sweat, bleed, and still keep pushing, I realized, this anime wasn’t just about action. It was about survival in a world that’s designed to crush you.

But here, now, get to the point: what I got really touched was not the fights. It was the silent scenes, as when Rudo recollected how his adoptive father said he should not lose himself, he should not allow the judgment of the world to define him. God, those flashbacks are rough. I began thinking how sometimes life sets you up to do things that you do not do and how society can judge you before you even get a chance to redeem yourself.

The twists continue to come in. You would think that Rudo would just concentrate on survival but no. He discovers even more sinister things, such as the Abyss being more than a trash heap, it is living. There are also monstrous creatures that were born out of discarded emotions, and some of them are more frightening than any of the human enemies. The first time one of those things appeared I was straight up missing a beat.

By the time that I was well into the story, I was back to watching anime. I cared about Rudo who was struggling to find justice, belonging and revenge. And honestly? I could see myself in him. There is that sensation of being judged and holding pain that the world does not comprehend and yet attempting to move forward with it all, and Gachiakuta struck a nerve in me.

Speaking frankly, I will say that observing Rudo struggle through the complications of betrayal, loneliness, and unfairness, I started thinking about my own life. I felt like I was being tossed into an Abyss and I had to figure things out based on nothing but my own rage. Like him, I had to grab my pain and make it sharp and then fight back.
So if you ask me? Gachiakuta is an interesting anime. It’s a mirror. It’s messy, it’s painful, it’s beautiful, and it’s real in a way you won’t expect.

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