Shojo works almost always have a female lead; however, many male homosexual love stories fall into the shojo category as well. Then again, I haven't really watched much shoujo anime, or even looked up much shoujo anime, so I don't actually know that much about them.Shounen, mostly.
shoujo is for girls and shounen is for boys and we all know the fact that boys > girls so shounen is better than shoujoshoujo is for girls and shounen is for boys and we all know the fact that boys > girls so shounen is better than shoujoshoujo is for girls and shounen is for boys and we all know the fact that boys > girls so shounen is better than shoujoEven a monkey can fall out of a tree, hit his head, slip into a coma, and die!
Shounen: “Anime targeted MOSTLY towards male teenagers.” Many are action/supernatural genres with a male protagonist. Only saying that because there are a few shoujo animes that made me cringe.Inb4 autists storm this thread: "These ain't genres"this question to me is strikingly similar to "who will you vote for, candidate A or candidate B?" Shonen works often have more than a fair share of fanservice as well. However, comedies and series with female protagonists are becoming more and more common. But not all are like that.
I’ve never really been a fan of the romance and comedy in shounen series nor do I give a fuck about predominantly action oriented series.In my opinion is Shounen, but that doesn't mean i don't like ShojoBoth "generic" shounen and "generic" shoujo are bad and boring.depends on how you define them but probably neither. Shojo most of the times is just fluff romance which isn't bad either but then it is real stale when it comes to experimentation.Shounen.Some shoujo anime make me question whether the main guy is annoyed by the heroine or not,and in some cases the guy magically comes out of nowhere whenever the girl is there(Ao Haru Ride) or maybe that's just me.Well, I love shoujo and I don't really like shounen. These tend to focus on romance and interpersonal relationships—though this does not mean they are necessarily without action or adventure. once in a while it's nice, but as a staple I'd prefer shounen.Shojo because Candy Candy fans from Europe, Central and South America put all other shonen fans to shameShounen all the way. Back then i more into shoujo cuz it's sometimes entertaining especially when i read Dengeky Daisy except when 1 girl with 10 boys, i pass anime like that i guess because Amnesia, but nowadays i prefer Shounen but i like to switch the genre when i finish the Shounen anime i watched... OMG what's happen i lost my mid help help lolI watch way more shounen than shoujo and I love it.
A typical seinen protagonist can be of any gender and age (in stark contrast to shonen, whose protagonists are almost exclusively young and male), but tend to be young adults (like its target audience). Shounen isn't plot-less violence (it depend of the series and the author). Josei series are often slice-of-life or romantic tales featuring adult women, though, in recent years, shonen-like action-adventures have become popular as well.
Literally meaning “few years,” “shonen” (少年) typically refers to young boys under the age of fifteen.
MyAnimeList.net is a property of MyAnimeList, LLC. Thus, shonen anime and manga are aimed at that demographic. The difference between a shonen manga and a seinen manga, for example, is often just a … It's just the target demographic. Shounen has a vastly larger appeal despite gender.If we are talking about the iconic sense of both shounen and shojo, I would say shojo.