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Saint Seiya Tenkai-hen Josou Overture Original ... ((new)) -

After Hades concluded, the canonical timeline was left with an between the “Olympus” war (the final battle of Hades ) and the eventual “new era” depicted in later manga spin‑offs and the 2019 Netflix adaptation. Fans had long speculated about what happened to the Saints after the final clash—did they retire? Did they ascend? Did new threats arise? Tenkai‑Hen was intended to fill those narrative lacunae .

Fans have extracted these tracks and combined them with the pilot footage, creating an unofficial “full‑episode” experience that has amassed on video platforms. Saint Seiya Tenkai-Hen Josou Overture Original ...

A fan‑curated YouTube channel, posted a 15‑minute excerpt that appears to be the first half of Episode 1. Highlights include: After Hades concluded, the canonical timeline was left

By 2004, Yokoyama had already retired from public composition due to health issues (he would tragically pass away in 2017). Tenkai-Hen Josou Overture was his last cinematic offering. Unlike his previous work on the Sanctuary and Poseidon arcs—which relied heavily on triumphant brass and soaring strings—this leans into despair, choir, and minimalist piano. Did new threats arise

Unlike the four movies that preceded it in the 1980s, the was designed as an official sequel to the manga’s timeline. It picks up in the aftermath of the bloody battle against Hades. Seiya is left broken, catatonic, and confined to a wheelchair, cursed by the sword of the King of the Underworld.

A bizarre track that mixes electronic percussion with a Renaissance lute. It underscores Seiya’s desperate, failed attempt to don the Sagittarius Cloth. The track abruptly stops—mimicking Seiya’s broken body. A genius piece of musical storytelling.