What is this?
© 松琴エア・はにゅう・講談社/外れスキル《木の実マスター》製作委員会
Light wants to be the greatest adventurer. He and his friend Lena eat skill fruits, which results in death if eaten more than once. Lena gains the Sword Saint skill and quickly becomes an S-rank adventurer, while Light gets the useless Nut Master skill, which only helps with nut farming. One day, Light accidentally eats a second skill fruit. However, instead of dying, he gains a second skill, Sword Saint.
Bogus Skill <
How was the first episode?

© 松琴エア・はにゅう・講談社/外れスキル《木の実マスター》製作委員会
Richard Eisenbeis
Rating:
When it comes to genre fiction—especially fiction in an already well-worn niche like the “overpowered fantasy adventure” genre—the question I ask myself is always the same. What sets this story apart from its peers? How does it twist tropes and cliches to make something new? The most damning thing an anime can do is not answer this question within its first episode… which brings us to Bogus Skill <
This first episode is nothing but the standard tropes, and even those are done in the laziest way possible. We have the childhood friend/love interest that likes our hero Light because…? And he is suddenly living with a cute little-sister character because…? Him getting a second skill is catastrophically bad because…? If the story doesn’t bother to answer the most basic questions needed to connect with the plot or characters on any level, I don’t see why I should give it a second thought.
Alright, maybe I’m being too hard on Bogus Skill <
In the end, this is an anime that doesn’t even try to set itself apart from the pack. It wants to hit every cliche it can for those who can’t get enough of this sub-genre and do nothing more. It’s bland, predictable, and I will likely never think about it again after I finish writing this sentence.

© 松琴エア・はにゅう・講談社/外れスキル《木の実マスター》製作委員会
Rebecca Silverman
Rating:
Well, this is awkward. As I was watching this episode, I became utterly convinced that I’d read the source material. I could predict each and every story beat and plot point, guess the character reactions, everything. So imagine my shock when I looked it up and realized that I haven’t read the manga and that the light novel isn’t even legally available in English. Was I having a psychic episode? Or is Bogus Skill <
Much as I’d love for it to be the former, my money’s on the latter. There’s almost nothing that stands out here in either a negative or positive way. You’ve got the ambitious hero, Light, whose ambitions are thwarted by his gods-given skill before they can start, his winsome childhood friend Lena, who gets the coveted skill, and the inexplicable loli, Ayla, who appears to exist as the episode says, “for reasons.” She’s also dumber than a brick, which she apparently needs to be for the plot, because it’s her inexplicable inability to see a giant poison label on the boxes of skill fruits that allows for the plot twist (or “twist”) to be revealed: that Light’s skill isn’t so useless after all. Also, she thinks that the skill fruit looks tasty, but they’re a weird green color with purple spots, nature’s way of screaming, “DO NOT EAT” at us.
Am I being unkind to this episode? Possibly, it’s a bit hard not to be when every word Ayla’s voice actor utters makes me want to scream (something about the pitch, although I’ve definitely heard worse), and the art and animation aren’t doing anything to help the story. Even if we disregard the way the skill fruit looks, including the fact that the way they’re drawn seems to indicate that they ought to be peeled, though no one does, this visually proclaims itself to be nothing new in the RPG-inspired anime oeuvre. But there are a few elements that could indicate a better story going forward. The nun who forces poor Lena into a career path could make a very good villain, and it’s clear that by the time Light finds Lena again, she’s been through a lot, with the next episode preview possibly indicating that the leader of her party has been abusing her. It’s at odds with the goofy tone of both opening and ending themes (which feature a lot of oh-so-quirky dancing), and it may be an indication that in terms of story, at least, I’m selling this short. It may be worth another episode just to see what the deal with Lena is and if Light’s line about “my second life” is an indication of isekai or just the way he’s framing his skill, but I’m not sure I can be bothered to give it that chance.

© 松琴エア・はにゅう・講談社/外れスキル《木の実マスター》製作委員会
James Beckett
Rating:
The depressing thing about Bogus Skill <
Anyways, outside of the dumb title, Bogus Skill <
Despite the overwhelming amount of ingredients that Bogus Skill <

© 松琴エア・はにゅう・講談社/外れスキル《木の実マスター》製作委員会
Caitlin Moore
Rating:
Something unique about Bogus Skill <
I will say that as far as junky LitRPG anime go, Bogus Skill <
At the same time, it should be telling that when I’m talking about the merits of a show, I’m describing all the things it lacks. Because, you see, Bogus Skill <
Even if I’m CinemaSins-dinging the story (because let’s be real nobody, who’s watching it cares), it’s just not very well presented. The animation is full of shortcuts, including during the sparse action scenes, and Light’s sword is extraordinarily ugly. I can’t say for sure if the writing is bad, the translation was clunky, or both, but the dialogue sure didn’t sparkle.
Bonus unique thing about it: I have to copy/paste the title because the brackets interfere with the HTML! It’s really annoying!