At the age of 17, I was in my first year at the Gubkin Academic Lyceum for Oil and Gas. My close friends were a group of four Korean people who were so into oriental culture who watched anime and dramas (Korean dramas) and also listened to K-pop. And in order to somehow get closer to the topics of their conversations, I decided to ask for advice on how to start watching anime. They answered in unison "death note".
Having turned on the first episode, I was immediately drawn in and I watched all the episodes in a couple of days. I realized that earlier in my childhood I had already bumped into it, it was twisted in 2x2, but at that time it did not arouse much interest in me. It is understandable why, despite the fiction and the interesting character in the form of Ryuk, the God of death, who loves red apples, this is still an adult anime, with murders and a plot, the beauty of which only a "strengthened" brain can understand.
In the story about the "Death Note": the main character Yagami Light is a high school student, an excellent student, and handsome. With the receipt of an unusual death note, in which a person with this name dies when writing a name, Yagami decided to arrange
genocide for all bad people in his understanding. But the Japanese police understand that this is wrong and they hire Detective L. to catch him. Will they catch L Light if deaths are so mysterious, where there are no weapons and no motive?