The opening theme, “Jingo Jungle” by MYTH & ROID, is an aggressive, industrial-rock masterpiece that perfectly captures Tanya’s manic energy. The classical-inspired score (with choir and organ) feels like a twisted hymn—appropriate for a story about defying god. Where It Stumbles 1. Pacing & Exposition The first two episodes are dense with worldbuilding, military jargon, and Tanya’s internal philosophy. New viewers may feel lost. The anime assumes you’ll catch up, but some early battles feel rushed to fit the 12-episode arc.
Studio NUT’s style is distinctive: exaggerated, blocky character designs (especially the wide, shadowed eyes and small mouths), fluid aerial combat, and an expressionist use of light and shadow. Tanya’s combat scenes—flying with a rifle and computation orb, reciting arcane artillery formulas—are kinetic and brutal. The art takes getting used to, but it serves the tone: grotesque yet precise. Saga Of Tanya
The divine antagonist is fascinating conceptually—a smug, Old Testament-style god who wants worship. However, Being X’s interventions feel arbitrary at times, and the metaphysical debate (free will vs. faith) is never fully resolved. The show works better as a military drama than a theological one. The opening theme, “Jingo Jungle” by MYTH &