
Dragon Drive
Oshimeter
Synopsis
For Reiji Ozora, quitting has always come naturally — sports, clubs, hobbies, he abandons them all the moment things get hard. Then his childhood friend Maiko drags him into Dragon Drive, a virtual reality game where every player gets paired with a dragon that matches their personality. Reiji is hoping for something massive and terrifying. What he gets is Chibi, a tiny, dopey-looking dragon that barely reaches his waist and looks more like a pet than a fighter. It's honestly kind of embarrassing. But there's more to Chibi than first appearances suggest, and that gap between expectation and reality is where the show finds its footing. Reiji slowly stops running from things, and watching that shift happen through a kid and his weird little dragon is genuinely satisfying. The virtual reality framing gives the isekai setup a grounded entry point — it starts as a game before it becomes something much larger. If you grew up with Digimon Adventure and liked the idea of bonding with a creature that reflects who you are, this hits a similar nerve. Fans of Angelic Layer will also recognize that underdog-paired-with-unexpected-partner energy. Dragon Drive is a 38-episode TV series from Madhouse that came out in 2002, so the production feels of its era, but the character work holds up. It's a slow build, not a flashy one, and that patience is part of what makes Reiji's arc feel earned rather than rushed.
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