Asuna ist eine Musterschülerin, die ihre Zeit lediglich damit verbringt, sich auf die nächsten Prüfungen vorzubereiten. Doch das hat ein Ende, als sie in die virtuelle Welt von Sword Art Online gezogen wird. Um in ihr altes Leben zurückzugelangen, setzt sie sich in den Kopf, ihre Gaming- Fähigkeiten zu perfektionieren, um das Spiel zu beenden. Beeindruckt von ihrer Entschlossenheit, erhält sie bald Unterstützung durch den Pro-Gamer Kirito. Werden sie es gemeinsam schaffen?
This volume of SAO was the first to really branch away from the main TV plot. The in-depth detail enhances the story I already know, especially with side characters less introduced in the show. What would you do if you were trapped in a virtual world where dying in the game means dying for real? As seen before, this progressive series might have a couple awkwardly phrased panels likely due to translation complications. Rarely, there will be an action panel difficult to visualize. Maybe I would have less difficulty if it were in color, but this is still quality.
This is supposedly showing the point of view of Asuna of the story of Aincrad, so I dont understand why the mangaka shows her in embarrassing situations showing her butt and underwear constantly, I find this manga offensive to a lot of women (not only feminists). The light novel is far better than this.
I can't tell if this is meant to be shoujo or shonen...
It's funny, fast-paced, and a really fun read; breaks a fair amount of rules of either genre, until it swerves suddenly back into placid-predictable panty-showing fanservice...
Differs from the light novel at some points, making it funnier and adding more character devolpment. From all the SAO stuff that I have read, this one is probably the funniest of them all.
Progressive ratchets up the fanservice in Volume 003. Fortunately, the increase of panty shots doesn’t signal the end of good writing. Asuna’s shattered sword leads to an intriguing mystery followed by the introduction of a devastating hardware-related predicament that wasn’t included in the Aincrad arc. In addition, Kirito/Asuna fans will be gratified to see the pair together more often than not despite Kirito’s decision to go solo.
The Review
Progressive’s sister series Fairy Dance lays on the fanservice pretty thick, but with Asuna as the main character in Progressive I thought the mangaka would be more high-minded in those matters. Well, Volume 3 proved me wrong. Two tense scenes turn into panty-revealing moments for Asuna, and when Kirito has her materialize all her items, it’s practically a rain of lingerie. The series might as well be called Underwear Art Online. On top of that, the Rat spends as much time making lewd insinuations about Kirito’s intentions toward Asuna as she does providing game-relevant information. Perhaps this is to raise Asuna’s moe level for males, but as a female reader, I find it irritating to have those elements diminish Asuna’s dignity.
Moving on to the plot, both the SAO anime and the Aincrad manga painted Kirito as a lone wolf who, after the defeat of the Level 1 Boss, doesn’t really interact with Asuna until many levels later. However, the Progressive storyline depicts them as a kind of dynamic duo. They’re still only in Level 2, but they are widely perceived by the SAO community as an item. After Asuna’s Wind Fleuret shatters, they investigate the incident together, and they also continue teaming up in the dungeons.
Asuna is not your typical gamer, and thanks to flashbacks of her upbringing, we understand why she thinks and acts the way she does. At times, those differences give her an edge over Kirito, but for most of Volume 003, she’s the weaker partner. Kirito’s constantly helping and bailing her out and often winds up slapped for his efforts.
Volume 003 also brings recent cast addition Nezha to the forefront. When he first appeared in the middle of Volume 002, I considered him an insignificant extra. However, the mangaka very cleverly puts the blacksmith at the center of a mystery, and immediately thereafter involves him in an NPC quest with Asuna. Progressive takes a much closer look at the early trials of SAO than the other versions, and Nezha demonstrates the difficulties of a player handicapped by hardware issues, which is a compelling twist on the game of death.
Extras include the title page and table of contents in color and bonus illustration.
so remember how the promise of "Progressive" was to showcase Asuna's growth from n00b to The Flash
yeaaaah, that's not what's happening. Instead Kirito is retconned to be spending way more time with her as full-on party member AND the fanservice is turning it up to max We got panty flashes from her increasingly shorter-drawn skirt, there's a scene with a cream-filled bun exploding all over her face .... and even a scene where Kirito in an attempt to catch her instead gets face-full of her butt and there's some extremely awkwardly placed flashbacks involving Asuna's mother. A clumsy attempt of LN's "mother's rosario" continuity on family problems?
Wish the blacksmith new-chara had more screen time instead. A player with a defective [?] NervGear connection screwing up his in-game depth perception sounds fascinating!
Turns out they can make "Asuna eating a cream-filled bun" even more fanservicey than "Asuna taking a bath." :P
Still, I really like this series! The characters are fun, and the fantasy game world and storyline are both interesting. I really like that, even though the characters are trapped in game and can't escape unless they beat all the bosses, this series is about much more than boss battles. All the little side quests and stuff are fun to read about!
I want a novel but this scratches the same itch of seeing SAO explored floor by floor with the mysteries and challenges of the world really l fleshed out with a focus on the best character Asuna. If I had one gripe, it is that Kiribati is still treated with too much reverence.
Wow, really enjoyed this volume of the SAO light novels! Very interesting & funny side stories! Love SAO & Kirito & Asuna together! : ) if you want to get into the series, I definitely recommend starting with Aincrad volumes first & watching the anime, its on Hulu, crunchyroll, & Netflix : ) Can't wait to read volume 4! : )
Asuna's sword get's destroyed by a blacksmith who seems to break a lot of special items. Hmm... Kirito and Asuna hang out a lot, and I suppose this is what they were up to inside the game. They are cute together, but not as amazing as they seemed to be in the anime. I will keep reading!
...Again...there's some totally unnecessary (and pretty ridiculous) fanservice...but the actual storyline behind all that is interesting enough that I'll put up with it to see how it all ends.
Another awesome story in the tradition of SAO. We get to see more of Asuna and Kirito working together as well as the beginning of a new challenge just for Asuna.
With this one it was rather intriguing to see how these players live and die by their weapons and how the loss of one can make all the difference in the world.