The Fall 2020 anime season is now in full swing, and you can watch all of the best offerings on streaming services.
The best ones accessible on the web-based features are a combinations of retro throwbacks, rom-coms, and enormous glossy forces to be reckoned with. There's something for everybody in the arrangement, from secrets to musicals. I've been observing in excess of twelve season debuts so you can observe best from the rest.
img/LandOfWano1. Jujutsu Kaisen |
The series follows Itadori Yuji, who is very average as a high school boy, except that he is incredibly athletic. So much so that he doesn’t want to take part in athletics. One day, his classmates unintentionally unseal a finger that attracts evil spirits called Curses to their kindergarten. Yuji can not escape the curses; he is able to take out the finger, but eventually, he is a conduit for the powerful Curse to which the finger belonged. He then is captured by a bunch of sorcerers who fight against Curses and say he is consuming another finger of the curse in order to get rid of the world of heavy Curses once and for all because Yuji does not lose control of himself by a spell.
The scheme entails murdering him, too. The anime for Jujutsu Kaisen is adapted from a manga series that runs alongside series like One Piece, My Hero Academy, and Demon Slayer in Weekly Shonen Jump. And it seems like there are high hopes for the series, particularly with the pretty amazing team working on it. MAPPA (Dorohedoro, Zombie Land Saga, Yuri on Ice) is an anime series, directed by Sung Hoo Park (God of High School) and written by Hiroshi Seko (Mob Psycho 100, Dorohedoro, Vinland Saga). It all seems to be the perfect mix for a grim horror-action series.
2. Yashahime: Princess Half-Demon
The follow-up to InuYasha’s all-time favorite fan, it’s awesome to write about the sequel to Yashahime: Princess Half-Demon in the grim year of 2020, 15 years since the last anime adaptation! Creator Takahashi Rumiko’s flagship girl power overflowed this time with Yashahime pursuing the daughters of Inuyasha and his brother Sesshomaru. The twins of Sesshomaru, Higurashi Towa, and Setsuna, were separated when they were four years old during a forest fire. Towa escapes into a secret tube that carries her to modern-day Japan while Setsuna remained in the feudal period to become a demon slayer under Kohaku. Meanwhile, InuYasha and Kagome’s quarter-demon daughter, the tritagonist Moroha, wander the feudal lands as well as the bounty hunter.
The three of them will be taken together on adventures over time. Yashahime is a series with a lot to live up to as an unforeseen sequel to a cherished classic and is already pulling hard on those nostalgic strings, practically in certain ways, thanks to the greater orchestral music of Wada Kaoru’s returning composer. We’re all going to have to wait and see how it will live up to the strong fan hopes, but for now, all the indicators point to Yashahime receiving a lot of love and attention with Takahashi’s participation, the plot structure, and the characters that are both closely connected to the history of the series while changing it enough to open up new possibilities, and good production standards all over that will ideally contribute to the succession.
3. Fly Me to the Moon
This anime is also positively filled with pop culture references from both Japanese and Western media, so if you’re a committed anime fan, you’ll find plenty of familiar gags in the cute shenanigans that make up Tonikaku Kawaii’s plot. Then what the heck are you asking for? It’s not like Truck-kun is going to get you if you hurry in too soon.
4. Ikebukuro West Gate Park
5. Burn the Witch
This entire anime is just about an hour-long, so it can’t do anything more than setting up its world and main characters, but it’s a refreshing return to form for Kubo and potentially contributes to more material for this season. We’re looking forward to seeing where this is heading!
6. Moriarty the Patriot
7. The Day I Became a God
The acclaimed graphic novel adaptations just keep coming! The Day I Become a God is a Primary Joint based on high school student Narukami Youta who is busy studying for his university entrance exams and a mystical girl called Hina, a self-proclaimed omniscient goddess who has seen the imminent end of the universe in 30 days and decides to spend the rest of her life with Youta in what will be a summer full of memories. As a Maeda Jun / Key translation, the same artistic powers behind Angel Drums,
Little Busters, and CLANNAD, there’s certainly a lot of hopes for The Day I Become a God based on that legacy alone, so at least we know the music is going to be amazing!
We’re hoping it’ll take two courses to really shine, but hey, it’s definitely an anime that many hold their eyes on for the special combination of light-hearted moments and monumental emotional drama with a sprinkle of the supernatural that made Key’s previous adaptations so special.
8. Golden Kamuy Season 3
Saichi Sugimoto, a former soldier in the Russo-Japanese War, finds himself in Hokkaido when he hears of a gold trove hidden somewhere on the island. The treasure once belonged to the Ainu, the tribal people of Japan, but it was looted and concealed by a single individual. He was captured, but instead of asking someone where the treasure was, he tattooed a secret on the skin of 24 other inmates who tried to escape. Teaming up with the young Ainu girl Asirpa seeking to avenge her father who was murdered by the robber when he stole the gold, attempting to catch all the prisoners or gathering their hides until the other parties looking for loot (including the thief’s co-conspirators and the dishonest Japanese army battalion) have them first.
While the tone of Golden Kamuy ‘s sound is very serious, it is probably similar to that of the Coen Brothers movie (more Fargo / The Big Lebowski than No Country for Old Men) when there are quite serious stuff going on, but there is also a silliness that comes from just appreciating how strange people can be. You’ll have a bloody battle scene one minute, then a chilly cooking scene where they’re playing about faeces, preceded by a moment of learning about the civilization of Ainu. It manages to find a harmony between these disparate sounds, from scene to scene, as if they were completely normal. With just 24 episodes so far, it’s easy and worth catching up before the new season begins.
9. Higurashi When They Cry
Speaking of terrifying curses, this season will also host the much-awaited revival of Higurashi: When They Scream. Based on the psychological horror graphic novel series of the same name, the plot follows Maebara Keiichi, the son of a successful artist who has recently relocated to the village of Hinamizawa in the countryside, making friends including Sonozaki Mion, her twin sister Shion, Ryugu Ren, Furude Rika, and Hojo Satoko. However, after learning about the annual Watanagashi Festival, he has been somewhat paradoxical about the so-called Oyashiro curse that has been connected to many murders and disappearances in the last four years.
10. Dragon Quest: The Adventure of Dai
This retro-style performance is a revival of the 1991 anime of the same name, all of which are part of the Dragon Quest video game series. Little here is really innovative – a spirited boy raised by monsters goes on a journey with a motley group of heroes to kill the Demon Lord – but the presentation is so perfect that you can’t help but enjoy it.
Akira Toriyama’s timeless art style, which defines the look of Dragon Quest, Chrono Trigger, and Dragon Ball, really puts you in a fantasy mood, particularly given the crisp clarity that modern animation techniques allow. If you’re in the mood for an uplifting anime to take you away from our own increasingly disappointing world, give this a watch!
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