I do think Oikawa genuinely wants Kageyama to grow out of his “king” phase. They have sort of an unspoken respect type of relationship going on. Kags praises Oikawa when he talks about him w/ others, and Oikawa speaks highly of Kageyama w/ others as well. It’s ironic that they won’t admit how much they admire eachother face to face because they’re both so prideful lmao.
I get the feeling that it's like a begrudging rivalry between the two, especially given that Kageyama, in quite a few ways, actually looks up to Oikawa as a role model to one day surpass.
Oikawa is the exact opposite of kageyama in terms of setting. Just like Ushijima said, Oikawa is an absolute dream to play with because he tailors his sets to which spikers he’s setting to (he brings out the best in whoever he plays with). Oikawa knows better than anyone else that his spikers are the ones who command the ball, he’s just the one who sets it up for them to make that play. Oikawa said exactly the same thing to kageyama that old coach Ukai told Hinata this episode. Also I love how oikawas photos are all just pictures of his nephew and sunsets
Kageyama & Oikawa’s dynamic is one of my favorites in Haikyuu. Their relationship started off harboring insecurities and toxicity, but it ultimately evolved into one of mutual respect and admiration. The growth that both characters experience from eachother is amazing to watch.
Just to clarify about the timeline. Japanese school year starts in April and ends in March, and consists of 3 semesters. The first semester starts in April and ends around July 20th, which is when summer vacation starts and lasts through August 31st. The second semester starts after summer break and ends around December 20th, at which point winter vacation starts and lasts through early January. The final semester starts after winter break and ends in Mid-March. Summer Interhigh prelims, which Karasuno lost to Seijoh, took place in early June. So it's been a bit more than a month now since end of S1 since summer vacation is around the corner. Interhigh itself, which Shiratorizawa will play in, will take place in early August. At the same time (early August), the Spring Nationals qualifying rounds will start (top 8 teams from Summer Interhigh prelims get a bye to the final round of qualifiers). The losers of the 3rd round of the summer Interhigh prelims (Karasuno lost to Seijoh in the 3rd round) will get a bye in the first round of pre-qualifying tournament. The final 8 teams from this tournament will join the 8 teams that got a bye to the final round. The final round of qualifiers for Spring Nationals prelims will take place in late October. The winner will participate in Spring Nationals in early January. The reason it's called Spring Nationals is that it used to be held in March during the spring break, but was moved to January to allow third years to participate in it, since the third years would have graduated in March.
13:25 damn that was mean...Oikawa actually gave Kageyama some useful advice..its just that not everyone sugarcoats their words and that doesn't make them mean to others.
ye It's a little frustrating to watch people undermine what oikawa says just because he doesn't want to help his own rival beat him. The fact that Oikawa still helped them even when they were opponents says a lot about his character. It's not like you'd see Lebron go help golden state if they were to ask for it because that's what happens when you play at the highest level at something and competing. The fact that AoA doesn't understand that is little infuriating to watch honestly because they are often good at understanding these small things.
@@ExaltedXero you guys are so unreasonable, if oikawa was a real human he would be the most obnoxious dude with THAT personality, even though he gave advice, the way it happened was so cocky and unecessary. 1st he ignored kageyama's bow which is disrespectful and 2nd oikawa took a "photo" for his ego... There is a reason Iwaizumi exists because oikawa has PERSONALITY issues! be logical about who you admire, even if oikawa is an outstanding ATHLETE he is not a perfect person, HE HAS FLAWS.
@@ExaltedXero and believe me when i say this, Oikawa is an outstanding ATHLETE and i respect that from him, but the dude is cocky as hell. If you dont realize that he is not perfect because you worship him so much that his good looks stops your brain from seeing his flaws then you're just a simp.
@@monspeet4287 Relax my guy, you are putting words in my mouth. When did I say he was an astounding guy? Calling me a simp because I see qualities that are admirable in him does not in any way mean that I worship him. You've got to actually read what I said jeez. The reason why I was frustrated was because if you see the time stamp (atleast look at it), the person completely dismisses what Oikawa says because he's letting his feelings get in the way, instead of actually understanding that Oikawa in his own way, was helping him. Just like you, your getting your feelings get in the way of what's actually happening and putting words in my mouth and it's god damn rude.
@@ExaltedXero the moment that you are admiring about oikawa that "hE gAvE kaGeyAMa aDviCe so ThaT sAyS a LoT abOUt hiS cHaRaCteR". Listen here you simp, think back in your brain what was the price for that "Advice". The price was kageyama needed to bow and a picture to feed his ego. Yea it says he is egotistical, respectable athlete tho. :)
Hinata growth!! I love him as an MC. I wish I could say more about his development but thats stepping into spoiler territory lmao. Him taking initiative in s2 is a great start for future development arcs to come.
What I really love in this episode is it doubles down on the fact that both were wrong in their own way. Hinata has to learn basics and grow his spiking ability before being able to use the quick. In a way, that was what Kageyama said Hinata should do. Kageyama on the other hand needed to learn that he needs to enable his spikers if he needs to be a good setter rather than just make it all about his toss because the spiker is the one who is the attacker here.
20:37 - For clarification: Interhigh (where they lost to Seijoh and happens before summer--3rd years can play here since it won't be as hard on their studies), then followed by summer camp training (happens in summer, set in Tokyo), and then they have their second match in Spring Preliminaries (happens end of the year when it's coldest. 3rd years typically don't play anymore so they can focus on their studies). 18:53 - Fun fact: the composer of Haikyuu, Yuuki Hayashi, used to be in rythmic gymnastics. He got into composing when he realised that his performances would suit better if he composed the music himself since nothing he found fit his routine.
Haikyuu is very realistic with it's depiction of people practing, slowly getting better and eventually giving a nice demonstration of what they have been learning But besides the big moments, there is an ever growing consistency and success rate for the players' basic skills that is really exciting to watch, stuff like Daichi being a good receiver in season one and gradually becoming almost as great a defender as Nishinoya or Tanaka's growing prowess both as a backline player and as spiker
Grandpa Ukai!!! We finally get to see the Coach who brought Karasuno to nationals! I like him because he's always so blunt but at the same time truthful and honest about his comments. I also love his relationship with Coach Ukai, his grandson HAHHAHAH. Oh and I see lots of comments about Oikawa and Kageyama's relationship, so I'll skim over that because, really, everything everyone here says makes a lot of sense. They both respect each other, albeit begrudgingly. Period. Hinata learning to work with setters who aren't Kageyama helps him improve his mid-air battle composure too, I love it. It's great that y'all love how the Karasuno boys are trying out all these new and different techniques, and your discussion brought up some solid points about how in-game playing is ultimately completely different from practicing:)) Can't wait for tmr!!
lmao actually oikawa is completely diff from kageyama with setting. he might act obnoxious but his setting style complements and brings the best from his teammates even though skill-wise, kageyama can surpass him. this is why ushijima wanted him on his team. Hinata calls him the great king because of skills and how he was kageyama's senpai but the truth is kageyama's individual setting skills and potential is higher than oikawa, he just doesn't quite know how to perfectly coordinate with his teammates yet.
I agree, tobio is not that sociable and doesn't know how to communicate well unlike oikawa, since Tobio doesn't any have single friends when he's still a little kid up until he grown up, but now that he have karasuno team, especially his senpai’s and shoyo, he’s slowly learning how to, and he's changing as well.
A tiny part of me wonders what would be if Hinata had Oikawa as a setter, since he understands more than anyone that its the spiker who holds the initiative. Hinata probably would’ve already went through this whole thing back in s1, because Oikawa’s sets are made specifically so his spikers are able to fight in the air. And no way would Oikawa let Hinata serve the way he does lmao. He’d have him do mandatory serving practice no doubt
Then Hinata would never have been on the starting line up cause even though he jumps high, he can't win against tall blockers... Being fast and dodging blockers is all he has, atleast till now... And that he can only do because of Kageyama cause his tosses are so accurate.
Nice reaction and discussion as always! Oikawa being knocked down a peg by the people around him is both funny and deserved. He needs to have his ego grounded lol or he'll seem more of an asshole than he actually is. Grampa Ukai is a seasoned coach and his guidance is just so good, especially for Hinata who before Ukai Keishin had no one coach him. Also the training montage always feels hype in this season. You can really feel the characters are hungry for growth. And yeah the "Spring Nationals" can be misleading, but basically in one school year they get two tournaments, the "Inter High" which they lost to Seijoh, and now they're training for the second tournament called the "Spring Tournament" which held near the end of the year (autumn/winter months) crossing over to January. The name's misleading as heck, but I think Ukai (Keishin) said it used to be held in spring, but recently got pushed to earlier months, thus allowing the third years to still take part before they graduate. (in Japan the school year ends near spring with a 1 or 2 week break before the next school year starts)
Oikawa is a setter that can bring the absolute best of his teammates or whoever he's ally with. This is why tobio looks up to him and at the same time want to surprass him. It's normal to both player to be each other's rival especially when you're position in the team is same. Tobio is a genius, and all rounder. Full of potential and talented. He just doesn't know how to coordinate with his teammates, he doesn't know how to communicate well because he's scared that he might offend them. But now that he have karasuno team, the coaches and shoyo, he's slowly changing, they're guiding him and giving him advices. Now instead of dictating them to match up with his tosses, he's adjusting for them, thanks to suga’s advice before. He's even asking around if his tosses is high or low for them, he'll correct it for them. Somehow he's challenging them to do their best and helping them to push their limits and best. As for their misunderstanding (Hinata and Kags) I think Tobio thinks if they pushed what Shoyo wants (this is just an conclusion) and didn't work (you've seen that they failed many times) it might affect them and the team.
It took me this rewatch (#8-12 probably lol) to realize kageyama was going to the local volleyball class for juniors out of instinct because he couldnt go to the school gym for practice. He only met oikawa on sheer coincidence. Its like when a 17 year old goes to their pediatrician for medical help This kid lit has no life outside of volleyball
I like your discussion about how it's "satisfying" to watch Haikyuu and how it differs in ways from shounen that feature fantasy. There's something about that "real" element that gets to me too, 1) because it's relatable to my own volleyball journey and 2) because growth is intoxicating to see. We're seeing how each of these characters tackle their individual need to grow and this team confront the places where they need to develop further. I would say that this arc is, inspiration-wise, one of the best in the series. Something about the tenacity in it speaks to me, as does the persistence and resilience to keep going and keep working to transform both self and team.
OMG finally!! this is when haikyuu gets more technical and "unlocks" a new set of strategies and plays, love it, hinata will finally think his actions haha! it's important for him to fight in mid-air battles, a great spiker is one who can spike any ball from any setter, and if he couldn't do it, he would reach his "ceiling" pretty soon. likewise, a great setter is the one who can set to any spiker and adjust to their needs. that's why what said oikawa is so on point, the spiker is who has the lead, the setter has to identify his preferences and abilities to bring the best of them :) I love the explantion of tempos, as a setter, one truly appreciates this :) so, for the new set that coach ukai is going to try to teach kageyama, it's really really hard! haha to make the ball loss its motion and movement and just drops like a brick, you really need good technique and raw talent...and for him to try it in the "freak quick", its truly another level. many argue that it is not possible, and maybe there are some licenses haikyuu take, but the theory still stands and i's true :) also, because I saw in another of your videos you had the question if you can touch it with your foot, the answer is yes, you can touch it with any part of your body, but just a touch, you can never "hold" it (or touch for prolong seconds) because then it's an infraction. obviously touching it with other parts of your body besides your arms or hands is a last resort, because you can't be accurate or efficient with a chest touch for example, and you can't score points with a floaty pass with your head. sorry for the long post but I love how accurate haikyuu is :D
Nah, it's still the spring. It's been like a week or two since that last practice camp. Also, I'm surprised by how much the comments section made this episode about Oikawa.
I felt confused at first too...this episode began a bit abruptly compared to the last one. I guess the production team didn't focus on that a lot. It went okay after the first 5 minutes.
i am unable to compreend your hate for oikawa. Like, how can you hate the best character in the show? I dont know, it seems so petty. Like He is super nice, just likes to tease a little. Anyways, that is the only part i dont really agree from the whole reaction.
I do think Oikawa genuinely wants Kageyama to grow out of his “king” phase. They have sort of an unspoken respect type of relationship going on. Kags praises Oikawa when he talks about him w/ others, and Oikawa speaks highly of Kageyama w/ others as well. It’s ironic that they won’t admit how much they admire eachother face to face because they’re both so prideful lmao.
That's what I love about this series! It's the same with Kindaichi and Kageyama too on a smaller scale.
I get the feeling that it's like a begrudging rivalry between the two, especially given that Kageyama, in quite a few ways, actually looks up to Oikawa as a role model to one day surpass.
Oikawa is the exact opposite of kageyama in terms of setting. Just like Ushijima said, Oikawa is an absolute dream to play with because he tailors his sets to which spikers he’s setting to (he brings out the best in whoever he plays with). Oikawa knows better than anyone else that his spikers are the ones who command the ball, he’s just the one who sets it up for them to make that play. Oikawa said exactly the same thing to kageyama that old coach Ukai told Hinata this episode. Also I love how oikawas photos are all just pictures of his nephew and sunsets
Kageyama & Oikawa’s dynamic is one of my favorites in Haikyuu. Their relationship started off harboring insecurities and toxicity, but it ultimately evolved into one of mutual respect and admiration. The growth that both characters experience from eachother is amazing to watch.
I love the fact that Toru drops on Kageyama same fact that Ukai senior shows to Hinata
It really drives home just how great of a setter Oikawa actually is even if he’s not as outstanding as some other setters we see in the series
Just to clarify about the timeline. Japanese school year starts in April and ends in March, and consists of 3 semesters. The first semester starts in April and ends around July 20th, which is when summer vacation starts and lasts through August 31st. The second semester starts after summer break and ends around December 20th, at which point winter vacation starts and lasts through early January. The final semester starts after winter break and ends in Mid-March.
Summer Interhigh prelims, which Karasuno lost to Seijoh, took place in early June. So it's been a bit more than a month now since end of S1 since summer vacation is around the corner. Interhigh itself, which Shiratorizawa will play in, will take place in early August.
At the same time (early August), the Spring Nationals qualifying rounds will start (top 8 teams from Summer Interhigh prelims get a bye to the final round of qualifiers). The losers of the 3rd round of the summer Interhigh prelims (Karasuno lost to Seijoh in the 3rd round) will get a bye in the first round of pre-qualifying tournament. The final 8 teams from this tournament will join the 8 teams that got a bye to the final round. The final round of qualifiers for Spring Nationals prelims will take place in late October. The winner will participate in Spring Nationals in early January.
The reason it's called Spring Nationals is that it used to be held in March during the spring break, but was moved to January to allow third years to participate in it, since the third years would have graduated in March.
13:25 damn that was mean...Oikawa actually gave Kageyama some useful advice..its just that not everyone sugarcoats their words and that doesn't make them mean to others.
ye It's a little frustrating to watch people undermine what oikawa says just because he doesn't want to help his own rival beat him. The fact that Oikawa still helped them even when they were opponents says a lot about his character. It's not like you'd see Lebron go help golden state if they were to ask for it because that's what happens when you play at the highest level at something and competing. The fact that AoA doesn't understand that is little infuriating to watch honestly because they are often good at understanding these small things.
@@ExaltedXero you guys are so unreasonable, if oikawa was a real human he would be the most obnoxious dude with THAT personality, even though he gave advice, the way it happened was so cocky and unecessary. 1st he ignored kageyama's bow which is disrespectful and 2nd oikawa took a "photo" for his ego... There is a reason Iwaizumi exists because oikawa has PERSONALITY issues! be logical about who you admire, even if oikawa is an outstanding ATHLETE he is not a perfect person, HE HAS FLAWS.
@@ExaltedXero and believe me when i say this, Oikawa is an outstanding ATHLETE and i respect that from him, but the dude is cocky as hell. If you dont realize that he is not perfect because you worship him so much that his good looks stops your brain from seeing his flaws then you're just a simp.
@@monspeet4287 Relax my guy, you are putting words in my mouth. When did I say he was an astounding guy? Calling me a simp because I see qualities that are admirable in him does not in any way mean that I worship him. You've got to actually read what I said jeez. The reason why I was frustrated was because if you see the time stamp (atleast look at it), the person completely dismisses what Oikawa says because he's letting his feelings get in the way, instead of actually understanding that Oikawa in his own way, was helping him. Just like you, your getting your feelings get in the way of what's actually happening and putting words in my mouth and it's god damn rude.
@@ExaltedXero the moment that you are admiring about oikawa that "hE gAvE kaGeyAMa aDviCe so ThaT sAyS a LoT abOUt hiS cHaRaCteR". Listen here you simp, think back in your brain what was the price for that "Advice". The price was kageyama needed to bow and a picture to feed his ego. Yea it says he is egotistical, respectable athlete tho. :)
Hinata growth!! I love him as an MC. I wish I could say more about his development but thats stepping into spoiler territory lmao. Him taking initiative in s2 is a great start for future development arcs to come.
What I really love in this episode is it doubles down on the fact that both were wrong in their own way. Hinata has to learn basics and grow his spiking ability before being able to use the quick. In a way, that was what Kageyama said Hinata should do. Kageyama on the other hand needed to learn that he needs to enable his spikers if he needs to be a good setter rather than just make it all about his toss because the spiker is the one who is the attacker here.
20:37 - For clarification: Interhigh (where they lost to Seijoh and happens before summer--3rd years can play here since it won't be as hard on their studies), then followed by summer camp training (happens in summer, set in Tokyo), and then they have their second match in Spring Preliminaries (happens end of the year when it's coldest. 3rd years typically don't play anymore so they can focus on their studies).
18:53 - Fun fact: the composer of Haikyuu, Yuuki Hayashi, used to be in rythmic gymnastics. He got into composing when he realised that his performances would suit better if he composed the music himself since nothing he found fit his routine.
The water bottles are not for tempo. He’s training to “stop” the ball at a certain distance.
Haikyuu is very realistic with it's depiction of people practing, slowly getting better and eventually giving a nice demonstration of what they have been learning
But besides the big moments, there is an ever growing consistency and success rate for the players' basic skills that is really exciting to watch, stuff like Daichi being a good receiver in season one and gradually becoming almost as great a defender as Nishinoya or Tanaka's growing prowess both as a backline player and as spiker
Grandpa Ukai!!! We finally get to see the Coach who brought Karasuno to nationals! I like him because he's always so blunt but at the same time truthful and honest about his comments. I also love his relationship with Coach Ukai, his grandson HAHHAHAH. Oh and I see lots of comments about Oikawa and Kageyama's relationship, so I'll skim over that because, really, everything everyone here says makes a lot of sense. They both respect each other, albeit begrudgingly. Period. Hinata learning to work with setters who aren't Kageyama helps him improve his mid-air battle composure too, I love it. It's great that y'all love how the Karasuno boys are trying out all these new and different techniques, and your discussion brought up some solid points about how in-game playing is ultimately completely different from practicing:)) Can't wait for tmr!!
lmao actually oikawa is completely diff from kageyama with setting. he might act obnoxious but his setting style complements and brings the best from his teammates even though skill-wise, kageyama can surpass him. this is why ushijima wanted him on his team. Hinata calls him the great king because of skills and how he was kageyama's senpai but the truth is kageyama's individual setting skills and potential is higher than oikawa, he just doesn't quite know how to perfectly coordinate with his teammates yet.
I agree, tobio is not that sociable and doesn't know how to communicate well unlike oikawa, since Tobio doesn't any have single friends when he's still a little kid up until he grown up, but now that he have karasuno team, especially his senpai’s and shoyo, he’s slowly learning how to, and he's changing as well.
A tiny part of me wonders what would be if Hinata had Oikawa as a setter, since he understands more than anyone that its the spiker who holds the initiative. Hinata probably would’ve already went through this whole thing back in s1, because Oikawa’s sets are made specifically so his spikers are able to fight in the air. And no way would Oikawa let Hinata serve the way he does lmao. He’d have him do mandatory serving practice no doubt
Then Hinata would never have been on the starting line up cause even though he jumps high, he can't win against tall blockers... Being fast and dodging blockers is all he has, atleast till now... And that he can only do because of Kageyama cause his tosses are so accurate.
Nice reaction and discussion as always!
Oikawa being knocked down a peg by the people around him is both funny and deserved. He needs to have his ego grounded lol or he'll seem more of an asshole than he actually is.
Grampa Ukai is a seasoned coach and his guidance is just so good, especially for Hinata who before Ukai Keishin had no one coach him.
Also the training montage always feels hype in this season. You can really feel the characters are hungry for growth.
And yeah the "Spring Nationals" can be misleading, but basically in one school year they get two tournaments, the "Inter High" which they lost to Seijoh, and now they're training for the second tournament called the "Spring Tournament" which held near the end of the year (autumn/winter months) crossing over to January. The name's misleading as heck, but I think Ukai (Keishin) said it used to be held in spring, but recently got pushed to earlier months, thus allowing the third years to still take part before they graduate. (in Japan the school year ends near spring with a 1 or 2 week break before the next school year starts)
yea, his simps always defend him and they never acknowledge that oikawa has personality flaws, Iwaizumi knows this and that's why he is seijoh mvp.
Oikawa is a setter that can bring the absolute best of his teammates or whoever he's ally with. This is why tobio looks up to him and at the same time want to surprass him. It's normal to both player to be each other's rival especially when you're position in the team is same. Tobio is a genius, and all rounder. Full of potential and talented. He just doesn't know how to coordinate with his teammates, he doesn't know how to communicate well because he's scared that he might offend them. But now that he have karasuno team, the coaches and shoyo, he's slowly changing, they're guiding him and giving him advices. Now instead of dictating them to match up with his tosses, he's adjusting for them, thanks to suga’s advice before. He's even asking around if his tosses is high or low for them, he'll correct it for them. Somehow he's challenging them to do their best and helping them to push their limits and best. As for their misunderstanding (Hinata and Kags) I think Tobio thinks if they pushed what Shoyo wants (this is just an conclusion) and didn't work (you've seen that they failed many times) it might affect them and the team.
It took me this rewatch (#8-12 probably lol) to realize kageyama was going to the local volleyball class for juniors out of instinct because he couldnt go to the school gym for practice. He only met oikawa on sheer coincidence. Its like when a 17 year old goes to their pediatrician for medical help
This kid lit has no life outside of volleyball
I like your discussion about how it's "satisfying" to watch Haikyuu and how it differs in ways from shounen that feature fantasy. There's something about that "real" element that gets to me too, 1) because it's relatable to my own volleyball journey and 2) because growth is intoxicating to see. We're seeing how each of these characters tackle their individual need to grow and this team confront the places where they need to develop further. I would say that this arc is, inspiration-wise, one of the best in the series. Something about the tenacity in it speaks to me, as does the persistence and resilience to keep going and keep working to transform both self and team.
OMG finally!! this is when haikyuu gets more technical and "unlocks" a new set of strategies and plays, love it, hinata will finally think his actions haha! it's important for him to fight in mid-air battles, a great spiker is one who can spike any ball from any setter, and if he couldn't do it, he would reach his "ceiling" pretty soon. likewise, a great setter is the one who can set to any spiker and adjust to their needs. that's why what said oikawa is so on point, the spiker is who has the lead, the setter has to identify his preferences and abilities to bring the best of them :)
I love the explantion of tempos, as a setter, one truly appreciates this :) so, for the new set that coach ukai is going to try to teach kageyama, it's really really hard! haha to make the ball loss its motion and movement and just drops like a brick, you really need good technique and raw talent...and for him to try it in the "freak quick", its truly another level. many argue that it is not possible, and maybe there are some licenses haikyuu take, but the theory still stands and i's true :)
also, because I saw in another of your videos you had the question if you can touch it with your foot, the answer is yes, you can touch it with any part of your body, but just a touch, you can never "hold" it (or touch for prolong seconds) because then it's an infraction. obviously touching it with other parts of your body besides your arms or hands is a last resort, because you can't be accurate or efficient with a chest touch for example, and you can't score points with a floaty pass with your head.
sorry for the long post but I love how accurate haikyuu is :D
Post away!! We appreciate it.
coach ukai and coach ukai's relationship is amusing haha
also i like the parallel between little giant and hinata
Yeah Takeru is an awesome little guy 😂
Oikawa god
17:48 The moon didn’t shine on Tsuki at that moment
Aaah, so good
the toss that stops depends on the force and spin of the ball i think, it really does give the spikers more freedom to spike where they want
First one! Also Bokuto is legend!!!!
i cant wait for episode 7 & 8 ohhh maan
Aww man. There's nothing more satisfying than a good training arc.
Ukai Senior would fit in well in any staffroom.
🤗Can't wait for the next episode! Great reaction and as always I love the discussion at the end
Takeru is awesome 😂 I love him, I would also love to meet Oikawa's sister (Takeru's mom) but I don't think we ever get to
Secret tempo gonna be revealed soon... Hehehe
Your reactions are amaaazinnnggggg
❤
Nah, it's still the spring.
It's been like a week or two since that last practice camp.
Also, I'm surprised by how much the comments section made this episode about Oikawa.
Are you really that surprised...
@@AoAReacts On hindsight, no 😂.
I'm confused...the seasons are out of order
?
I felt confused at first too...this episode began a bit abruptly compared to the last one. I guess the production team didn't focus on that a lot.
It went okay after the first 5 minutes.
another episode of the beanie guy being spiteful and jealous of Oikawa, a 2d man that doesn't even exist lmao.
i am unable to compreend your hate for oikawa. Like, how can you hate the best character in the show? I dont know, it seems so petty. Like He is super nice, just likes to tease a little. Anyways, that is the only part i dont really agree from the whole reaction.