New 'Sword Art Online' Fan-Poster Hypes Season 3

Sword Art Online fans are excited to not only get a spin-off series, but the third season of the [...]

Sword Art Online fans are excited to not only get a spin-off series, but the third season of the mainline series is steadily heading toward its 2018 release.

The release of the third season may not be any closer than it was yesterday, but one fan definitely can help ease the situation with their great art teasing the next arc of the series.

Twitter user @kamone_owasera shared the following artwork which features characters seen in the upcoming Alicization arc, and since it so closely resembles Reki Kawahara's original light novel works, this fan-art is definitely great enough to soothe the pain of waiting even longer for the third season.

The third season is set to adapt the Alicization arc, which takes part in Volumes 9-18 of Kawahara's light novel series. In 2026, Kirito is offered a job with Rath. He's asked to work for the firm in order to test a new type of FullDive equipment known as the Soul Translator. But Rath had no plans to make a new FullDive gaming console. Instead, the firm is working to make a new military AI.

Bringing Kirito in to act as a human influence on AI, he finds that Rath had already trapped a child's soul in the machinery. When Kirito was brought out of the machine, Rath blocked his memories of his time in Underworld, but Kirito learns there are many who want him to keep quiet about his time with the AI, a child named Alice.

For those unfamiliar with Sword Art Online, the series was originally created by Reki Kawahara with illustrations provided by abec. The series follows a boy named Kirito after he and thousands of gamers get trapped in a virtual reality video game known as Sword Art Online. The gamers must band together to defeat the game's final level to escape, but Kirito and his guild learn there is more behind their prison than they were originally told.

The series began as a series of light novels published through Dengeki Bunko in 2009, and has been adapted into eight different manga series by ASCII Media Works and Kadokawa. The series has been licensed for an English language release by Yen Press, and has been adapted into an anime series by A-1 Pictures.

Its first season aired in 2012 and ran for 25 episodes, while its second season, Sword Art Online II, aired in 2014 and ran for 24 episodes. The series currently gearing up for its next big arc in the light novel series, "Unitial Ring," and the next season of the anime is set to adapt "Alicization.

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