Go!! Secret Society Dead Bunny Group Work -

You can tell this was made on a shoestring. The animation is limited; characters often just slide across the screen or are replaced by chibi-static figures. If you are looking for KyoAni fluidity, look elsewhere. The charm relies entirely on voice acting and writing.

Unlike shows where the "secret society" actually has powers, the Dead Bunny Group has nothing . They are incompetent in a very endearing way. Their greatest enemy is a locked door. Their "hostile takeover" of the school involves leaving passive-aggressive sticky notes on the principal's chair. It is a refreshing take on the "girls doing cute things" genre—here, the cute thing is failing spectacularly. The Bad: Know what you're getting into 1. It Ends Before it Begins The biggest crime of this short is that just as you get attached to the characters' specific brand of stupidity (e.g., the girl who believes she is a retired spy but is actually just a transfer student with allergies), the credits roll. You will finish the entire series in the time it takes to microwave a burrito. go!! secret society dead bunny group

Given that this is a relatively obscure, niche title (often confused with or overshadowed by Sabagebu! or Asobi Asobase ), this review assumes the reader is encountering it for the first time. Genre: Absurdist Comedy, Slice of Life, School Parody Episode Length: 3-5 minutes (Short format) MAL Score: N/A (Cult Classic status) The Premise (What is this?) At first glance, Go!! Secret Society Dead Bunny Group looks like a cute, low-budget show about four high school girls in a "secret" club. The gimmick? They claim to be a shadow organization pulling the strings of the school, operating under the codename "Dead Bunny." You can tell this was made on a shoestring

If you don't like "random = funny" humor (e.g., Pop Team Epic or Nichijou ), you will hate this. There is no plot. There is no character arc. The "secret society" never accomplishes a single goal. It is pure, unadulterated nonsense. Final Verdict Score: 7.5/10 (8/10 for fans of short-form comedy) The charm relies entirely on voice acting and writing

The show excels at abrupt shifts. The art style is pastel and soft, but the dialogue is surprisingly cynical. One character (usually the stoic, glasses-wearing "Commander Rabbit") will deliver a deadpan line about the futility of existence, followed by a slapstick pie fight. It captures the chaotic energy of middle school sleepovers mixed with a Monty Python sketch.

"We are the darkness that lurks in the vending machine's change slot. Now give us your milk bread." — The Leader (Episode 3)