
…ლ(ಠ_ಠ ლ)Why can’t you people just accept exposition and development for what they are rather than shove “ I’m a bad bad vampire” down my throat? And MOSTLY when it comes to the Mukami brothers! The whole “biting is hot” thing going on in this show has become a running gag from the first season and yet this one still insists on it. It’s like when stuff start getting fairly nice and then somebody in the staff went like NOPE, WE HAD A LACK OF BITING THIS EPISODE! This second season makes me actually re-think the rating that I gave to the first season because they’re both 4 on MAL for me, but I genuinely think that this one actually TRIED to make sense in some parts, but it was not under any means Average (what I consider a 5 to represent), so it would be like 4.5.

It’s still bad, consistency commited suicide like any other sense of ethics and morales I could expect, but goddamn it, it’s painful to say that I actually did come to like the Mukami brothers…or some parts of them at least. I have a confession to make: this season has become a freakin guilty pleasure for me.

Like what does it mean? “More” Diabolik Lovers, version “Blood”? *sighs* First review of the year and a bad one…Īnyway! With no further ado, let me get into this. Ok, so, only me finds that comma in-between “more” and “blood” to be awfully distracting? I wanted to bite my fingers for having to put it there. The incident heralds the appearance of four new vampires, the Mukami tribe, and to her dismay these dashing young men have their eyes and fangs set on Yui as well!

Yet troubled by new dreams and apparitions mentioning a mysterious “Eve,” Yui’s life is suddenly once again – quite literally – turned upside down when she and the Sakamaki brothers are involved in a fiery car crash. Synopsis: Yui Komori may (or may not) have attained vampire status, but due to her inexplicable links to the Sakamaki clan her life remains somewhat unchanged.
