Wonder Egg Priority: Season 1/ Episode 13 [Special Episode] – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
Despite being a 40-minute episode, 25 is spent recapping the first season, and what is left? Well, it may not feel like it was worth the time you waited.
Despite being a 40-minute episode, 25 is spent recapping the first season, and what is left? Well, it may not feel like it was worth the time you waited.
Wonder Egg Priority comes to an end, and it leaves a load of unanswered questions that might not be answered until this summer.
Why Ura-Acca and Acca started the Wonder Egg Project is revealed, and the story is quite heartbreaking.
In a Momoe-focused episode, she meets a trans man and might be the first to reunite with who they’re trying to save.
In an episode finally honing in on Neiru and her personal life, we learn her company may have a connection to the Wonder Egg Project – without Neiru knowing!
In this recap episode, we get minor new details, but not a whole lot.
In another Rika-focused episode, we meet her mother, learn more about her home life and the struggles she goes through.
As Mr. Sawaki finds a way to become a permanent fixture in Ai’s life, the question of what was his involvement with Koito continues.
We finally get some idea of what happened with Neiru and her sister, as Rika presents an idea of what happened with Koito and Mr. Sawaki.
Wonder Egg Project goes where most anime don’t, as one monster is a pedophile, and we are introduced to an additional girl trying to save someone who committed suicide.
A new player enters the game, and while she may come off shallow and highly annoying, there might be more to Rika Kawai than it appears.
In “The Terms of Friendship,” Ai is forced to do beyond the minimum, as she has done in the past, if she wants to save Koito this time.
A guide for the Funimation series “Wonder Egg Priority.” Included is information about characters and details about the series.
What begins as a story about an adorable recluse becomes a rather bloody tale about how the lead character’s friend committed suicide.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.
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