The Ruins of Hizkivk

Two Ominous travelers stumbled upon a caravan one day. The caravan rider asked them to hop on. They were headed towards scourge ruins, one that held secrets, no one knew. One was named Tin and the…

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The 11 New Anime of Fall 2022 You Should Be Watching

It might say “fall” in the title, but in some parts of the AniTAY-World, winter is in full effect. Which means it’s time for cozy socks, fluffy sweaters, delicious chai tea lattes, and cozying up under a blanket to watch some (sometimes) wholesome anime.

Our always-intrepid AniTAY community has been hard at work watching, discussing, and debating the cream of the crop of this Fall season. These eleven shows are what we think deserve your time and attention as the days get shorter and colder. A spicy rom com to heat you up? Check! A gory shounen romance about a boy and his chainsaw? Sure! What about Utena in space? Present and accounted for!

Before we dive in, here are some things to remember:

1)As always, we have omitted continuing shows and sequels. This list is only for new anime this season. Check out our Fall 2022 sequel guide for that information:

2) Only shows available for legal streaming are considered. Netflix has complicated what this means, but limited-availability shows like Netflix originals are fair game for our list.

3) Each entry contains a “where to watch” section, but keep in mind that we base our listings on United States availability.

Now, grab your favourite hot beverage and settle in for our thoughts on the best of the season!

Akiba Maid War

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Nagomi Wahara had a dream of being one of the cute maids working in a cafe. But upon taking a job at the Oinky-Doink Cafe in Akihabara, her dream quickly turns into a nightmare as all the frills and “moe moe kyun!”s mask the darker, deadlier side of the maid cafe world…

Why You Should Be Watching: P.A. Works is known for their excellent “working” shows such as Shirobako. This is not one of those series. Akiba Maid War is what you get if you took Is the Order a Rabbit? and asked Quentin Tarantino to rewrite it in the style of Kill Bill. The series turns the usual trope of “girl starts a new job and discovers how hard it really is” so thoroughly on its head it’s doing cartwheels, preventing it from becoming just another stereotypical show about a girl coming of age in a maid cafe world. Instead, while Nagomi discovers that despite it all, she does want to be a maid, her journey so far has been such a rollercoaster ride that one can’t help but hold on for dear life while laughing from the exhilaration of it all.

The violence in Akiba Maid War doesn’t just take refuge in audacity; rather, it proudly revels in it like maids singing and dancing to a pop song for their clientele. Quite literally, in fact — at the end of the first episode, fellow new maid Ranko (a ‘veteran’ of past maid wars) saves Nagomi by mowing down an entire rival cafe’s staff, which the show intercuts and overlays with the singing onstage of a bouncy number with on-point lyrics (such as “moe moe and blam!”) by their fellow maids back at the Oinky-Doink Cafe.

Speaking of music, the series features a fantastic opening number, which starts out all electronic rock with spoken lines from the cast appropriate to a maid cafe such as “welcome master! Welcome mistress!” and mentioning the traditional maid cafe fare, omurice, as the cast strides through the streets of Akihabara heading into battle, before transitioning into a J-pop jam that the main cast dances to back in their cafe. The ending, however, is an enka styled lament sung by Ranko. Both songs feature “moe moe kyun” as part of their lyrics, calling further back to the maid cafe setting.

To sum it all up, if you’re not a fan of shows with serious fighting and bloodshed, this isn’t the one for you. But, if you’re looking for an insane, completely over-the-top wild ride through a funhouse mirror world (or is it?) where maid cafes are more like yakuza clans, then you should give Akiba Maid War a watch.

Recommended by: Alistair Hyde, Doctorkev, Gugsy, Reikaze, Tenshigami, TheMamaLuigi, umrguy42

BLUELOCK

Spoiler-free Synopsis: On July 2, 2018, Japan lost against Belgium during the Russian World Cup. As a result, for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, the Japanese Football Union hires the soccer enigma Ego Jinpachi to develop a controversial project called Blue Lock. The idea is to make 300 U-18 strikers compete against each other in a training regimen designed to select one of them to become the world’s greatest striker and star of the Japanese national team. Those who fail will never represent Japan; however, knowing this, Yoichi Isagi decides to rise through the ranks putting aside his ethical objections, even if it means ruthlessly crushing everyone.

Why You Should Be Watching: Although the summer’s Ao Ashi already provided a work focused on player development for a fullback defender, this does not stop BLUELOCK from setting itself apart from other soccer anime by developing the concept of the cult of personality around a leader egotist striker. The result is an antithesis of teamwork that, at the same time, will bring out the leader inside this individual to build a soccer team from scratch. Against him are 299 opponents with the same goal, raising the stakes and bringing out the hidden potential of the eventual winner in the process.

The highlight of this anime is the journey, the process of becoming the chosen candidate. It simply works as a great and funny way to entertain any soccer or sports anime fan during the real-world competition to increase the hype. The elimination game works to attract anime fans who typically don’t like sports shows. The intense mood and focus on training make it a show that almost anyone will enjoy.

The unrealistic goal of getting to the last game of the World Cup representing Japan is inherently silly, but with an overachiever main character who scores goals left and right reminds us of the genre like Captain Tsubasa. The fact that Yoichi can throw out all the notions his coach and teammates fed him by reacting through pure self-preservation to satisfy his agenda settles his ability to learn, unlearn, and relearn to adapt. Besides, Yoichi has no talent at all, which lets the audience learn the basics of soccer and understand the actions professional players take to score goals.

In addition, the other players are well-rounded characters with enough development to make them interesting to watch as they try to stop Yoichi, especially for the emotional payoff every match brings. Moreover, the interactions between members of Team Z create an exciting atmosphere because watching rivals analyze each other while they play their cards to survive as a unit is entertaining.

Recommended by: Alistair Hyde, Dark Aether, Marquan, Nomad Reikaze

Bocchi the Rock!

Spoiler-free Synopsis: As socially anxious Hitori “Bocchi” Gotou was growing up, she saw how even introverts could get popular and famous if they became rock stars. So, Bocchi became great at playing the guitar, but as she graduated middle school and entered high school… she still had no friends. Invited by the drummer Nijika to join her band Kessoku Band, Bocchi works to achieve her dreams while trying to overcome her anxieties and make the most of her high school youth.

Why You Should Be Watching: Focusing on a loner character often doesn’t end well, usually coming off as in poor taste or cringy, like Watamote, for example. But Bocchi the Rock! isn’t that: it gets what it is like to be lonely and have social anxiety and shows it off in an honest, uplifting, and relatable manner. With a supportive cast of characters around her, Bocchi is always moving forward. It’s so gratifying to watch her make progress throughout the show — sure they’re small steps, and occasionally she steps backwards, but she makes real progress and it’s delightful to see.

Bocchi’s interactions with the rest of the cast are heartwarming and put a smile on your face, and everything is presented in the most creative way possible. Cloverworks is having so much fun with this one: the directing, art, and Bocchi’s reactions are absolutely top notch, and the delivery of the jokes land every time. Also, getting at least one A+ reaction GIF an episode is so delightful. It’s very easy to get committed to the band, too, as their performances are really engaging and watching them grow together, learning to play as a group, and get better as the show goes on is very compelling. I find myself looking forward to Bocchi the Rock! the most every week, and it’s easily my AOTS. I highly recommend it to anyone if they have even the slightest bit of introversion in themselves or appreciate incredible, relatable directing.

Recommended by: Doctorkev, Gugsy, Koda, Marquan, Nomad, Reikaze, Stinolez, Tenshigami, TGRIP, TheMamaLuigi

Chainsaw Man

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: In an alternate 1990s where devils exist and are fuelled by the fears of humans, 16-year-old Denji does whatever he can just to survive. Saddled with insurmountable debt from his deceased father, he sells parts of his body and works as a devil hunter with the dog-like Pochita to scrounge up the cash to pay off the yakuza to which he’s chained. Said yakuza, however, end up betraying Denji by making a deal with the Zombie Devil to kill the young man. Instead of dying, though, Denji himself makes a deal with Pochita, who turns out to be a Devil as well: in exchange for “living out his dreams”, Denji not only lives, but is transformed into the human-devil hybrid “Chainsaw Man”. After making short work of the Zombie Devil and zombified yakuza, Denji is immediately found by the mysterious Makima, who offers him an ultimatum: either be killed on the spot or work for her and her government-run devil-hunting squad, the Public Safety Division. What follows is Denji not only accepting this offer, but learning what “life” is like when you have control over your own body, actions, and fate for the first time.

Why You Should Be Watching: Because this is a nearly rock-solid adaptation of one of the most revered manga of the past decade. While not a perfect adaptation, it does come pretty close to matching the ungodly hype of the manga, with fantastic animation by studio MAPPA, great performances by its sub and dub voice casts, and direction that feels like it not only understands what made the source material so critically and commercially acclaimed in the first place but is also willing to make changes to make the show more accessible to newcomers. While its gore probably will turn people off, and its core themes might require some rewatches to fully comprehend, there is truly nothing else airing this season, let alone this year, quite like Chainsaw Man.

At its heart, CSM is still a shounen series, following the usual premise of a young man getting superpowers and setting out with a goal of finding and defeating a world-ending big bad, but what sets it apart is its sheer level of ambition and the confidence it has in itself and its audience. Beneath the blood and jokes about how boys at that age think lies a series about self-actualization and learning to find value not just in what you and others have or can offer you but in who they are as people. You can almost call this an anti-isekai: instead of trying to find fulfillment through escaping to a fantasy world, Denji’s arc is to become an actual person in spite of the crazy world around him. An apotheosis where godhood is a normal life… or at least what can pass for normal in a world full of both figurative and literal devils…

Recommended by: Alistair Hyde, Dark Aether, Doctorkev, Koda, Marquan, Nomad, Reikaze, Requiem, Stinolez, Tenshigami, TGRIP, TheMamaLuigi

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners

Spoiler-free Synopsis: The Santo Domingo district of Night City is overrun by corruption and crime. David Martinez, a teenager that lives in the city’s slums, tries to fulfill his mother’s lifelong wish for him to work as a top executive at Arasaka, the world’s leading security corporation. To this end, he attends the prestigious Arasaka Academy while his mother works tirelessly to keep their family afloat. However, after David loses everything in a street gang incident, he becomes an “edgerunner,” a mercenary conducting business in the edge of legality such as hacking computer systems, selling stolen high tech goods in the black market, and taking dangerous commissions that usually involve theft, murder, escort, and other illicit acts.

Why You Should Be Watching: This is a great story that provides commentary on the social decomposition induced by the unethical use of technology to widen the gap between the rich and the poor . It hits like a precision strike right at the heart of the human condition by developing the idea that teenagers need to live fast and expect to die young because the corporation that owns the city and its society determines their future.

The interest resides in watching the colorful cast of misfits descend tragically into darkness, falling victim to the poison each chose by installing cybernetic implants in their bodies to survive the spectacular bloodbath their line of work entails, knowing they might become cyber-psychotics addicted to immunosuppressant meds to delay their unavoidable grim fate.

As with any other raw and unblinking exploration of the topic, every situation is very explicit, so nudity, graphic violence, and obscenity are here to provide that sweet shock factor every enthusiast of the genre desires. In addition, these elements provide a realistic feeling, with striking designs, sharp angles, starkly contrasting colors, a feeling of perpetual motion, and smooth animation, all done by the masterful hands of Trigger that works in favor of the world-building to normalize the fact that Santo Domingo, Night City is a misanthropic depiction of the Jetsons.

Although the relationship between David and Lucy is very cute and their empathetic sparks of hope worth cheering for, the troubled couple is just part of a crew with charming and memorable interactions that will make you remember them until their inevitable demise. As a gang, they are a united bunch once you see them in action. Rebecca is a lovely free-spirited girl, her brother Pilar is a foul-mouthed tech geek, Falco is the loyal getaway driver, while Doro and Maine are the substitute parental figures. The charisma of the characters almost makes it hard to swallow the fact that things are hopeless.

Recommended by: Alistair Hyde, Dark Aether, Doctorkev, Koda, TGRIP, TheMamaLuigi

Do It Yourself!!

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: The free-spirited Serufu Yua and her more studious and technologically-driven childhood friend Miku Suride apply to enter the highly advanced Yuyu Girls’ Vocational High School, whose curriculum is based on the latest in cutting-edge technology. Miku gets accepted, but Serufu is rejected and has to enter the older and more traditional Gatagata Girls’ High School. One day Serufu damages her bike in an accident and is helped by an older student at her school, Rei Yasaku, who is handy with tools. Learning that Rei is the head of the school’s DIY Club, Serufu decides to join and help Rei save the club from closing. In doing so she hopes to reconnect with Miku through their love for crafting.

Why You Should Be Watching: There are unquestionably untold scores of “cute girls doing cute things” club-based slice of life anime. What makes Do It Yourself!! stand out from the crowd is that it is just dripping with complete and utter passion. The core of the series is that no matter how technologically advanced humans come, there just isn’t much that can trump the satisfaction that human ingenuity can birth.

You give a person some planks of wood and a few screws, and the possibilities are nigh infinite. DIY!!’s raw sense of wonder in the chase of creation evokes the similarly stellar Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken!. The setting itself reflects this theming, , as Serufu’s school is literally in the shadow of Miku’s school, being almost completely surrounded by it, and yet still thriving in its rustic ways.

And just like with Eizouken!, the passion is carried over to the animation itself. Not only does Do It Yourself!! have stellar sequences of sakuga, particularly during some of Serufu’s daydream scenes, but the animation team has taken extreme care to get all the proper hand positioning on all the tools used. This is something that for many will be a minor detail, but for me it elevates it from a series where cute girls are merely pantomiming a hobby, to one where they are actually doing it.

Recommended by: Doctorkev, Koda, Marquan, Nomad, Requiem, Stinolez, TGRIP, TheMamaLuigi, umrguy42

The Eminence in Shadow

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Cid has spent his entire life training, aiming to be the best version of himself that he possibly could. He portrays himself as the generic, average background character, only to prowl the nights exacting brutal, vigilante justice on the ne’er do wells of society. Before he reaches the pinnacles of perfection, however, he’s killed by Truck-kunisekai’d to another world into a noble family, where all his training has led him to be overpowered. In this new world, he becomes “Shadow,” creates an underworld organization to battle a cult he believes he’s fabricated; except, the cult is real and it’s up to him and his “Shadow Garden” to rid the world of the evil Cult of Diablo from the shadows.

Why You Should Be Watching: Because He. Is. Atomic. In all honesty, this show is hilarious, despite us having seen a lot of this before. We’ve seen isekai, we’ve seen main characters play the mob (background) character, and we’ve seen overpowered protagonists who basically live life on easy mode. BUT, Cid makes it all work. His antics as the generic background character are truly entertaining, and despite how ridiculously overpowered he is, the fact that he thinks that his followers all humor him and merely act along with his complex machinations is something I didn’t think I’d see this season. Each and every one of Shadow’s followers are overpowered, and follow with him sometimes scary devotion; the cult he believes he’s fabricated is real and looking to wreak havoc, and he constantly and unwittingly thwarts their plans. And he does it all utilizing no-hold-barred powers, easily dispatching his enemies in bloody, gory fashion. He shows no mercy.

Eminence leans into its absurdity. Cid is seen on multiple occasions literally setting up the scene for his performances as Shadow, much to the delight of his followers. He spends nearly all of the money he’s earned on artifacts, furniture, and window dressing just so his underlings can enter a room and see him in all his glory as he monologues as Shadow. Even when he wings it, he ends up furthering the plans of the Shadow Garden. The action is flashy and violent, the comedy gets me every episode, and the relationship dynamics between Cid and the rest of the characters keep you wanting to tune in every week just to see how he’ll juggle decimating whatever enemy he’s facing. It’s a great time every week if you want to turn your brain off.

Recommended by: Marquan, Reikaze, Requiem, Stinolez, TheMamaLuigi

Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch from Mercury

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Suletta Mercury enters the exclusive Asticassia School of Technology as a trainee “mobile suit” pilot. Despite her shyness, she becomes embroiled in a dispute with the popular Guel Jeturk over the treatment of his fiancée, Miorine Rembran. All issues between students can be resolved through duels using their mobile suits, and so Suletta finds herself confronting the leading fighter on her first day. Furthermore, Suletta’s unusual mobile suit, “Aerial,” rouses suspicion from her peers and the corporate benefactors of the school. Now the subject of both school gossip and vying corporate interests, Suletta risks her secret past being uncovered.

Why You Should Be Watching: If you have ever been interested in watching a Gundam series, The Witch from Mercury offers an approachable opening free from necessary foreknowledge. The draw for both new and old fans alike is how a series unshackled from past lore departs from traditional Gundam storytelling while also remixing series staples.

The underlying theme in Witch, where child soldiers face greater, oppressive political and economic forces they cannot control, is not dissimilar from the earlier Gundam series and their sombre struggles for survival. However, Witch meshes school affairs and the military-industrial complex for a slightly theatrical series centred on characters’ personalities. There are conspiracies afoot that might burst the bubble of a happy school life, but Witch indulges Suletta’s teenage ambitions, from making friends to wanting to date. Brash school bullies or student committee decisions loom just as large as the political backdrop threatening Suletta’s peace.

This marriage of school shenanigans and political thriller is familiar territory for scriptwriter Ichiro Okouchi, who co-created Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion. He also wrote light novels for Mobile Suit Gundam: 08th MS Team and Revolutionary Girl Utena. The influences of all three creations are apparent; most explicitly, Utena’s protagonist duelled members of her school to defend her potential bride from harm. Suletta and Miorine’s blossoming romance emotionally anchors Witch, representing freedom from the machinations surrounding them. Their deepening bonds hold tantalising dramatic potential.

For a series focussed on relationships — trusted friendships and especially fraught filial duties — the mobile suit battles act as extensions of character conflicts, enriching their dynamic spectacle of melee and laser beams, all set to Takashi Ohmama’s evocative score.

Witches connote both historical victims of senseless persecution and mysterious, powerful figures. This series is worth watching to see Suletta’s growth from the former to the latter.

Recommended By: Alistair Hyde, Dark Aether, Doctorkev, Koda, Marquan, Nomad, Reikaze, Requiem, TGRIP, TheMamaLuigi

More Than A Married Couple, But Not Lovers

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Jiro is a fairly average student who happens to have a crush on his childhood friend, Shiori. Akari is a bright and cheerful gyaru who happens to have a crush on popular classmate Tenjin. Both hope to get closer to their crushes by getting paired with them in the Marriage Practical, where — seriously — high school boys and girls are paired up as pretend married couples and monitored. No, seriously. And wouldn’t you know it, not only do Jiro and Akari end up together, but their respective crushes are a couple too! What a wacky coincidence! But luckily, if they score high enough in the practical, they can change partners! Time for Jiro and Akari to work together.

Why You Should Be Watching: Ok, let’s just be honest: the setup for this show is dumb as hell. There’s really no other way to say it. The idea that a school would conceive and execute an idea as breathtakingly dumb as “let’s have teenagers couple up and live together in apartments” is a severe strain on one’s suspension of disbelief. In the real world, that would only end in teen pregnancy, violence, or both. Just looking at it from the synopsis, this show shouldn’t work. At all.

But, it does! It somehow takes that ridiculous concept and turns it into legitimately engrossing content and one of the best romantic comedies of the year. The secret? Fantastic visual presentation and excellent character writing. One of the best decisions the writers made was to keep the focus tight on Jiro, Akari, and Shiori. We hardly see much of Tenjin, despite his importance to the story, so we usually don’t really know what’s going on with him and Shiori — and neither do Jiro and Akari. The tension this causes is fantastic and leads to another key to the writing: there’s no bad guys. Nobody in the cast is scheming or trying to hurt anyone else; they’re just kids dealing with new emotions and hormones and trying to figure stuff out. It’s very compellingly done.

Our main focus is Jiro and Akari, one of the best anime couples of recent memory, despite not technically being a couple (yet.) Jiro is just a good guy trying to figure out what he wants, Akari is a ball of fire and charisma, and watching the two grow closer is great. But, you also have Shiori, whose shy innocence makes you want to root for her, too. In the end, it’s difficult to choose who you want to ‘win’ this romantic conflict — truly a sign of effective writing.

Visually, the show is a stunner. It has a bright, vibrant color palette and vivid backgrounds and textures that make scenes pop. The way it depicts things like a starry sky or a bright street during a festival are sumptuous. The very specific aesthetic chosen is particularly effective in some of the more…steamy scenes. Readers, there are some scenes that are -no other way to say it — really hot. We’re talking fan yourself, sweaty, ‘dear Lord I believe I have the vapors’ kind of hot.

Married Couple is a remarkable series as it manages to use great aesthetics with effective character writing to make a truly ludicrous premise work way better than it deserves to. So cue up a “so hot” gif, and join us on this ride.

Recommended by: Doctorkev, Gugsy, Marquan, Reikaze, Requiem, TheMamaLuigi

Raven of the Inner Palace

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Raven of the Inner Palace follows the life of an unusual Imperial concubine, whose role appears to be to exist on the periphery of the palace with little interaction with the Emperor, the court, or the palace’s servants. This unusual concubine, the “Raven Consort”, is also shrouded in mystery, as she is rumoured to use strange magic to help and harm people of the palace. One day, the Emperor encounters the young concubine and sets in motion a series of events that could change an empire.

Why You Should Be Watching: Raven of the Inner Palace is a soft-spoken show. It combines elements of a low-fantasy historical drama, a mystery, and a prototypical live-action Chinese drama into a package that feels correctly paced as it follows its main mystery forward. Its strength primarily lies in its simplicity, as it doesn’t rely on an assortment of B- and C-plots to keep things moving, instead focusing on the evolving nature of the Emperor and the Raven Consort. It also never feels the need to ratchet up the stakes and rarely does it ever feel urgent, instead allowing the mystery to be a slow boil that’s more character-driven than plot-driven.

I was personally initially struck by the similarities that the show shares with the usual period dramas you see in Korea and China, as the plot elements are similar in structure, albeit now transposed on an anime that dials up the low-fantasy aspects of the genre that’s not easily portrayed in live-action. Compare with the Chinese-produced Psychic Princess from a few years back. For some out there versed in this culture, suffice to say Raven is a good implementation of that format.

Recommended by: Dexomega, Marquan, Requiem, TGRIP

Urusei Yatsura (2022 Remake)

Spoiler-Free Synopsis: Perpetually horny high-school student Ataru Moroboshi is a hopeless womaniser. When he’s randomly selected by computer to battle the alien invader Oni people’s champion in a game of tag in order to save the Earth from subjugation, a (completely avoidable) misunderstanding leads to him proposing marriage to his opponent — the beautiful, otherworldly, luminous, electric alien Princess Lum. Suffice to say, Ataru’s long-suffering girlfriend Shinobu isn’t impressed, and Lum’s arrival in Ataru’s life proves to be only the first in a long line of weird and supernatural visitors to the previously normal Tomobiki town. The perpetually devoted/insanely jealous Lum will never allow Ataru to blatantly womanise in peace ever again!

Takahashi disliked the way 1981 series director Mamoru Oshii (Patlabor, Ghost in the Shell) inserted his own characters and tone into his adaptation, and this new version from Jojo Bizarre Adventures’ studio David Production is expected to hew closer to Takahashi’s manga, with a “greatest hits”-style rather than exhaustive adaptation. This reverential approach is particularly evident in the beautiful modern-but-retro character designs, especially with Lum’s luminescent multi-tone hair, an effect that would have been difficult to achieve in 1981 without modern digital animation techniques. Apart from the appearance of smartphones in the opening sequence, the show’s setting seems to have been preserved in the early 1980s, making a fascinating period piece where people still use wired home telephones and tiny CRT televisions.

This retro atmosphere extends to the content of the stories and character interactions, which recall a time when manga and anime tropes were less stringently codified. Urusei Yatsura was probably the originator of many harem comedy anime tropes, so viewer over-familiarity with subsequent entries in the genre may dull some of the impact a little now.

Even though one shouldn’t expect anything groundbreaking from Urusei Yatsura, it’s still a great time. Takahashi always excelled at screwball comedy with a keenly surreal edge, and no anime since has ever quite replicated her unique mix of character comedy, bizarre situations, fantastical whimsy and overt bawdiness. Perhaps the original never quite broke out into Western mainstream success because of the heavy reliance on Japanese folklore for its strange events. A modern anime audience is more familiar now with the concepts of Yokai and Shintoism, so perhaps now is the time for radiant original waifu Lum and her crazy friends to achieve the success they deserve.

Recommended by: Doctorkev

Our seasonal recommendations articles are the results of weeks of collaboration and discussion by many members of the AniTAY community. Some wrote part of the article, and many took part in the voting and discussion to bring this list to life.

Contributors in Alphabetical Order:

First time experiencing our seasonal recommendation list? Check out last season’s here!

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