Summary

  • Black Clover may not be innovative, but it still offers an enjoyable experience for fans of the battle shōnen genre.
  • The series subtly tweaks shōnen tropes, creating unique elements that are often overlooked in discussions of originality.
  • Rather than striving for groundbreaking ideas, Black Clover focuses on providing simple engagement and comfortable viewing for its audience.

Since it first premiered, its similarity to series like Naruto as a sign of Black Clover being derivative and lacking originality. However, I think that people who accuse Black Clover and characters like Asta and Noelle of being trope-laden ripoffs miss the reason the series is so enjoyable to begin with. Worse yet, I worry that they perpetuate a big problem in discussions surrounding anime/manga.

Not everybody has to love every series. It's okay to be turned off by the fact that Black Clover isn't striving to break new ground. It's also true that Black Clover is still a run-of-the-mill battle shōnen: there's a rivalry between Asta and Yuno; a grand aspiration of becoming Wizard King; training, tournaments, unexpected alliances, and even a beach episode. But with Black Clover's fifth season on the horizon and people considering picking up the long-running shōnen, I'll it it's not the most original series ever — but that's what makes it so good.

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Black Clover Pokes Holes In The Concept Of Originality

Focusing On Originality Is The Wrong Move For Fans

Black Clover and Naruto
Custom image by J.R. Waugh

While it's easy to find the derivative elements in Yuki Tabata's series, it's also true that Black Clover builds on ideas from Naruto in a way that is arguably "original". However, I don't think these two points contradict each other, because I think the concept of "originality" is a red herring.

Black Clover, in many ways, isn't "original" since it openly borrows shōnen tropes. However, when it comes to "originality", there are nuanced changes that a series can make which would still be left unconsidered — because the conversation had already ended with the idea of pure "originality". This is unfortunate, because Black Clover finds countless ways to set itself apart.

Consider Jujutsu Kaisen's intentions of being an anti-Naruto. While a series like Jujutsu Kaisen takes a more oppositional view to shōnen tropes, Black Clover makes those tropes its own - with subtle, but still worthwhile, tweaks. Black Clover's anti-magic is a cool concept, even if it's not "innovative". Instead of a protagonist with innate potential for one reason or another, Asta's lack of magic also breaks the mold for shōnen protagonists in a fascinating way by impeding his big dream of becoming Wizard King.

On another level, while it's as character-driven as Naruto, Black Clover also arguably corrects some of Naruto's mistakes in world-building. Black Clover is one of the first battle shōnen to reach its level of popularity where class distinctions play a major part, with the pejorative "commoner" constantly thrown around. The home village of Hage also reframes how protagonists' hometowns are normally presented by showing it to be a place that people want to leave, run-down and forgotten by the Clover Kingdom.

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After critics have said that Black Clover is a Naruto ripoff, creator Yūki Tabata just amusingly stole a name from another one of the Big Three manga.

However, because these are all subtle changes based on well-defined shōnen norms and inspirations, the discourse of originality conveniently forgets them. They're not flashy, and they don't stick out like the more obvious shōnen subversion in series like Attack On Titan or Jujutsu Kaisen. Still, I don't think that makes them any less valuable. The point here is simple. If the value of "originality" comes down to the contribution of new ideas, then it's actually harder to define what makes a creative work game-changing than many fans believe.

That's especially critical since anime tends to be prone to what you could call the rat-race of innovation. There's a constant evaluation of how "innovative" or "derivative" works are, and measuring their quality by that. The end result is not just a pathological obsession with novelty or the confusion of novelty with quality, but a very fixed idea of what "novelty" and "quality" even mean.

Black Clover Shows The Value Of Simple Engagement

When You Forget About Innovation, You See Things Differently

Black Clover's Asta and Noelle stand with their fingers over their chest in a salute.

Black Clover is an "underrated shōnen" that wears its influences on its sleeve. Black Clover remains one of my favorite anime today because of how it wears its influences, and it remains underrated for the same reason. What I think lies at the core of being an anime fan is to have all kinds of experiences with anime and manga that scratch as close to "authentic" as they can. One of the conditions for authentic enjoyment of anime and manga is undermining (or at least being suspicious of) the default discourses for evaluation and comparison.

When I started with anime, my favorites were the random isekai with names like "I Got Reincarnated As A Toilet In The Silly Dimension" or series like Rosario + Vampire that aren't always taken seriously. As I became more involved in anime and the surrounding discourses (or in other words, as my "tastes matured", whatever that means), there were a few ideas I started to unknowingly smuggle:

  • Modern shōnen build on the mistakes of their predecessors.
  • Innovation is the crux of a good story.
  • The more obvious a work's departures from the norms of its genre and medium, the more original it is.

Although these ideas weren't true to my experience, they were the stances I adopted after participating in anime discourse uncritically. I never questioned the core assumptions or the ideas they were based on. As a result, those became the lens through which I analyzed anime. Ultimately, though, these evaluations are bound by a context and subculture, so they're subject to change - and to intervention.

Black Clover Is My Anime "Comfort Food"

It's Okay To Simply Enjoy An Anime

Acier Silva's Magic black clover

I can watch Black Clover and, in a lot of ways, know what I'm getting. That makes it a cozy watch, which is a perfect reason to love it on its own.

Black Clover is fantastic for a simple reason. There's something to be said for a series that acknowledges and takes advantage of its context without pretense. Shōnen, taken as a broad genre, has developed its norms for many reasons. Mostly, because they reflect the changing attitudes, cultures, and priorities of viewers/readers. Black Clover is inevitably going to be similar to Naruto, to Dragon Ball, and others. Because it's effectively a love letter to its genre, like with its Dragon Ball homage, that's unavoidable.

This isn't to Black Clover's detriment. The emphasis on always "pushing boundaries" in ways that (apparently) must be obvious has produced franchises that can be emotionally exhausting because of how seriously they take themselves. That doesn't mean they're bad at all, it just means they don't make for great comfort watches. When I watch Black Clover, there's just hype and intrigue, excitement, and, at times, sadness or anger. It produces these reactions without any aspirations except being an enjoyable story.

I can watch Black Clover and, in a lot of ways, know what I'm getting. That makes it a cozy watch, which is a perfect reason to love it on its own. At the same time, the fact that it's a separate story with different priorities also makes it fresh. Yes, Asta is similar to Naruto. But he's not Naruto, nor is Yuno Sasuke. These are their own characters, with unique qualities and deliberate choices that are only deeply undervalued by calling them rip-offs or copies.

Black Clover isn't bad because it's derivative. It's a showcase of the fact that a work can't not be derivative, but that the choices made in deriving from other works are what makes any work unique. It's thoroughly lovable, even if it's not trying to be the next big game-changer. I don't watch Black Clover to contemplate ambiguous themes or be challenged, I watch Black Clover to smile. That's undeniably valuable in itself. If a person loves battle shōnen, I think they'll enjoy — if not love — Black Clover just like I do.

Black Clover (2017)

Your Rating

Black Clover
Release Date
2017 - 2021
Directors
Tatsuya Yoshihara, Ayataka Tanemura
Writers
Kazuyuki Fudeyasu, Kanichi Katou
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Dallas Reid
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Jill Harris

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Asta and Yuno, orphans with a shared dream of becoming the Wizard King, follow distinct paths: Yuno with natural magic abilities, and Asta through determination despite his lack of powers.

Franchise(s)
Black Clover
Seasons
1
Streaming Service(s)
Netflix
Main Genre
Action
Creator(s)
Yūki Tabata