
Noein: To Your Other Self
ノエイン もうひとりの君へ
In the near future, a violent battle takes place between the dimension La'cryma (protector of humanity) and the dimension Shangri-La, bent on the annihilation of all space-time. A group known as the Dragon Calvary is dispatched through space and time, searching for the only thing that can stop the invasion: the Dragon's Torque. In the present, twelve-year old Haruka and her friend Yuu, are contemplating running away from home when they meet a member of the Dragon Calvary named Karasu (Crow). He believes that Haruka possesses the Dragon's Torque and claims to be Yuu from fifteen years in the future... (Source: DVD Complete Series Box Set)
Noein: To Your Other Self is a tv with 24 episodes, from Fall 2005, produced by Satelight, rated 7.1/10 on AniList.
Synopsis
In the near future, a violent battle takes place between the dimension La'cryma (protector of humanity) and the dimension Shangri-La, bent on the annihilation of all space-time. A group known as the Dragon Calvary is dispatched through space and time, searching for the only thing that can stop the invasion: the Dragon's Torque. In the present, twelve-year old Haruka and her friend Yuu, are contemplating running away from home when they meet a member of the Dragon Calvary named Karasu (Crow). He believes that Haruka possesses the Dragon's Torque and claims to be Yuu from fifteen years in the future... (Source: DVD Complete Series Box Set)
Main Characters
Tags
- Time Manipulation — Prominently features time-traveling or other time-warping phenomena.
- Tragedy — Centers around tragic events and unhappy endings.
- Alternate Universe — Features multiple alternate universes in the same series.
- Female Protagonist — Main character is female.
- Coming of Age — Centers around a character's transition from childhood to adulthood.
- Post-Apocalyptic — Partly or completely set in a world or civilization after a global disaster.
- Super Power — Prominently features characters with special abilities that allow them to do what would normally be physically or logically impossible.
- Lost Civilization — Featuring a civilization with few ruins or records that exist in present day knowledge.
- CGI — Prominently features scenes created with computer-generated imagery.
- Gore — Prominently features graphic bloodshed and violence.
- Heterosexual — Prominently features a romance between a man and a woman, not inherently sexual.
- Denpa — Works that feature themes of social dissociation, delusions, and other issues like suicide, bullying, self-isolation, paranoia, and technological necessity in daily lives. Classic iconography: telephone poles, rooftops, and trains.

