The sixth episode of the third season of One Punch Man It has turned on the alarms by disappointing levels never seen before to fans of Shonen. While fans were waiting for unbridled action, they found what Japanese forums have cruelly baptized as “Kamishibai” (paper theater). The criticism has exploded globally, and the symbol of this debacle, in addition to previously commented problems, has focused on the elimination of a small, but beloved detail of the manga, the elegance of Fubuki.
The sacrifice of one of the most beloved girls in One Punch Man: Why did they erase it?

To understand the magnitude of the crisis in production, it is enough to observe what was left out of the adaptation. In the manga there is a short scene, but one much loved by fans is from Genos and Fubuki Going up the stairs heading to the apartment Saitama. In that vignette, Fubuki Elegantly raises the edge of her dress to avoid stumbling, a subtle gesture that the community baptized as the famous “Princess Walk” (Princess Walk).
Despite being simple, and possibly a detail that the production team of the Anime Catalog as irrelevant, the community appreciates him so much because it enhances the elegant princess personality that the sister of Tasumaki.

About the cut in the anime: The series decided to omit that fragment completely. The reason? It does not appear to be a matter of narrative rhythm, but a purely technical limitation. Animating the natural movement of the fabric while a character ascends steps requires a lot of pictures and a precise physical simulation, something that involves time, resources and a budget that, apparently, was not available. As several followers on networks mentioned: “Surely the shot was too detailed and complicated to encourage with the current production conditions.”
“Kamishibai”: When the anime stops moving
If the lack of Fubuki It bothered the West, in Japan the criticism of the new episode of One Punch Man It went to the general structure. Forums broke out with the term “Kamishibai”, referring to the fact that the episode seemed like a succession of static images with background voices.

Users pointed out that entire dialogue scenes were resolved by showing Fixed plans of the building To avoid animating mouths or body gestures. comments like “They just move their mouths and stand still” or “Even the walk looks bad” They show that production is operating under extreme resources savings, delegating much of the work to external studies (outsourcing) that failed to maintain quality.
Where was Murata’s “aura”?
The general consensus is that, although the character designs try to be faithful, the “soul” has been lost. A Japanese user summed it up perfectly: “The aura of the manga drawing has disappeared”. Relying so much on the static planes to “gain time”, the series has lost the kinetic fluidity that made the franchise famous in its first season. we are no longer watching One Punch Man; We are looking at an illustrated audiobook.
Verdict: An S-Class in Budget C
the elimination of the famous “princess walk” of Fubuki on One Punch Man It is not the root problem, but the visible consequence of something deeper. It is a clear symptom of a production that can no longer or does not manage to work on the fine details that characterize the stroke and sensitivity of Murata. And if a simple sequence of someone climbing stairs is too expensive or complex, it is understandable that many fans are setting off alarms about what could happen with the most demanding fights in the arc.
Conversation, inevitably, turns towards creative sacrifice: is it worth cutting “expendable” scenes to save important fights, or is it precisely these subtle moments that give life and personality to the anime? The discussion is open, and the fandom has intense opinions about it. What do you think?