Anton Chigurh from No Country for Old Men is a smartly written smart character. When Chigurh kills a hotel room full of three people he books to room next door so he can examine it, finding which walls he can shoot through, where the light switch is, what sort of cover is there etc. This is a smart thing to do because Chigurh is a smart person who is written by another smart person who understands how smart people think.
Were Sherlock Holmes to kill a hotel room full of three people. He'd enter using a secret door in the hotel that he read about in a book ten years ago. He'd throw peanuts at one guy causing him to go into anaphylactic shock, as he had deduced from a dartboard with a picture of George Washington carver on it pinned to the wall that the man had a severe peanut allergy. The second man would then kill himself just according to plan as Sherlock had earlier deduced that him and the first man were homosexual lovers who couldn't live without eachother due to a faint scent of penis on each man's breath and a slight dilation of their pupils whenever they looked at each other. As for the third man, why Sherlock doesn't kill him at all. The third man removes his sunglasses and wig to reveal he actually WAS Sherlock the entire time. But Sherlock just entered through the Secret door and killed two people, how can there be two of him? The first Sherlock removes his mask to reveal he's actually Moriarty attempting to frame Sherlock for two murders. Sherlock however anticipated this, the two dead men stand up, they're undercover police officers, it was all a ruse. "But Sherlock!" Moriarty cries "That police officer blew his own head off, look at it, there's skull fragments on the wall, how is he fine now? How did you fake that?". Sherlock just winks at the screen, the end.
This is retarded because Sherlock is a smart person written by a stupid person to whom smart people are indistinguishable from wizards.
>I even checked the book, just to be sure you hadn't tampered with it! >well actually Light we just copied it really well down to the smallest details haha you lose
Eternally fucking mad that this is the way they ended a good series.
I would say so,even though most of the time Kaiji's plans fall flat and he has to come up with a new one on the spot.
Jayden King
Reinhard >Not a faggot >Not a teenager >Not a pretentious bastard >Not an evil son of a bitch >Can rule an Empire >Has the most charisma
Wyatt Young
Why is Yea Forums so thoroughly infested with open monoculture posters now? Was it the fire that opened the floodgates?
Brazenly spamming Yea Forums memes wasn't acceptable just a few weeks ago.
Charles Davis
most of his keikakus were stupid asspulls
Joshua White
I really liked Liar Game too
Connor Rogers
Light's keikakus were all ass pulls so it's karmic justice when he was defeated by the ultimate ass pull himself.
Asher Gutierrez
>Implying these asspulls weren't planned by him all along
Alexander Robinson
I don't think Light's ass pulls were that egregious; some of them needed a few assumptuions, but it was never as blatant as 'we did the thing that you literally planned for, but we just did it better'.
Of course it's been a while since I've read/watched it, so I could be really wrong
Bentley Evans
Everything Light does is a massive ass pull. It's literally all "I knew that this incredibly contrived sequence of events would unfold so I did this" reveals after the fact. Never once is something resembling a coherent plan actually put into acion.
Nolan Robinson
The door handle one was. Literally nobody checks the angle of their door handle, then remembers it for entire day when there's so much shit to do. He also lived with family who could accidentally move it too.
But no, he immediately suspected cameras being installed in his room
Daniel Jenkins
psycho pass had some good keikakus
Levi Lee
I thought the knob was one of his specific traps, like the pencil on the hinge and the paper in the door?
The fact that the knob and the pencil were moved but the 'obvious' paper was put back was a dead giveaway that someone had been in his room.
That's a stretch, the logic and reasoning is explained for most of them, that's the whole point of his inner monologue half the time.
Jordan Edwards
Isn't the door handle one that he set it higher than its normal resting point? That would be pretty easy to remember.
>logic and reasoning That's not what it is. It's usually just retelling the events but saying he knew this would happen. No actual reasoning.
Thomas Price
unironically this when the "everything was part of my plan" episode came out I legitimately was blown away by how cool he was thank god I've become less retarded with the years
Jason Rivera
L is right when he says stuff like "that's what every teenager does" I actually did that autistic shit and placed objects in specific places to see if people would enter my room
Isaiah Hughes
Griffith no question, Reinhard second place
Leo King
No Game No Life has a lot of good keikaku doori moments.
Kayden Davis
I didn't fully understand the door thing. So basically he set three traps. #1 is the paper in the door. #2 is the door handle being slightly lowered #3 was some kind of pen stuck in the door hinges, and the pen breaks if you open the door.
Now #1 and #2 have already been mentioned by you guys. But what i never understood is how he can check if the pen is broken before opening the door, even though the pen is on the inside of the door, and he has to open the door to get to it, but then the pen breaks???
Camden Howard
>the chess pieces have feelings! No.
Ryder Perry
based coffee cyclops man
Isaiah Allen
This and kaiji
Liam Barnes
That's a bad example. There are parts like the fight against Jibriel where he removes air, the earth core, etc. and then at the end he pulls out a piece of paper with a word written on it, like he planned everything from the beginning.
Same with the last match against the werebeasts, where he calculates steph's movements while she's carried around by an NPC