I really liked "Dorohedoro" and "Flip Flappers". For a more surreal anime movie I think "Paprika" could be a starting point, I don't remember much knowledge about Japanese culture or other anime being needed to enjoy it.
Anime
This community is the place to discuss and ask questions about anime, anime news, and related topics.
Currently airing show discussion threads are created by our resident bot, [email protected]. If it doesn't make a thread for an episode that you want to discuss, see the user guide on the wiki for instructions on how to request that rikka make a thread for you to use.
Check out our wiki to find:
- Episode Discussion Thread Index
- Weekly Discussion Thread Index
- Bot User Guide
- List of shows currently monitored by the bot
Rules
- Posts must relate to anime or similar (donghua, etc.)
- Discussion threads for currently airing media must be made by the bot. If there isn't a discussion thread made for a piece of media you want to discuss, then request it via pm.
- Ensure that all series spoilers are tagged. See here for details.
- Memes should be directed toward [email protected] (or similar) instead of this community
- Do not post explicitly NSFW material. Please use your best judgement when marking lewd material as NSFW, unmarked material risks being removed.
- Please redirect discussion of piracy towards a more appropriate community
- Any clips from currently airing shows cannot include content from episodes released within the past 7 days.
- All posts and comments must adhere to the ani.social Terms of Use
- In general, keep things civil and avoid attacking other individuals.
Related General Communities
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- [email protected] (Spanish language community)
- [email protected] (Myanmar community)
- Megathread of other communities on the fediverse maintained by @[email protected]
I'll just suggest some shows in the order I watched them (or some order, I don't remember exactly):
-
Dragon Ball Z (though the pacing is frustrating... You could try playing Kakarot instead though)
-
Dragon Ball Super (much better pacing)
-
One Punch Man
-
Naruto (it's long but worth it)
-
Hunter x Hunter
-
Sword Art Online
-
Deathnote
-
Seven Deadly Sins (though be aware that there's some consent issues here, though they do craft an interesting scenario for it that I can't give away without spoiling)
Didn't they fix the pacing with DBZ in DBZ Kai? Never watched it myself, but that's what I understood.
I've never seen it myself either. DBZ abridged is pretty good, though I think I appreciate it more having known the original version first (otherwise I would have suggested that one).
All I know is that I'm glad I watched DBZ as episodes taped on VHS instead of the weekly format I think they were on TV (I didn't have cable growing up). There were literally entire episodes that were mainly Goku and opponent, opponent telling Goku how fucked he was and Goku getting excited because fighting his way out of being entirely fucked is his favorite pastime. It was bad enough spending 23 minutes watching that without having to then wait a week to see what happens next (usually massive energy attack, whoever threw it acting smug until the dust clears to show their opponent still standing).
I'm not selling it great, but the real fun of the show was in the character interactions. The fights were fairly predictable but the characters were great.
I believe the best starter animes must need some criteria:
- not too long (seeing something having hundreds of episodes is a huge hurdle)
- self-contained (no spin-offs of other franchises that you need to know)
- completed (no "if you want to know how it ends you have to read the source material or hope for a second season")
- no need to know cultural references (what the fuck is a shikigami?!)
- universal themes (love, hate, friendship, hardship, etc.. Stuff that applies to everyone)
- characters should be likable (no one keeps watching if they dislike the characters)
- interesting from the start (no "uh, it gets great from the 5th episode, just keep at it")
- interesting throughout (show shouldn't fizzle out or run out of steam)
- normal visuals (yes, shows with unique art styles can feel fresh for someone with more than 1000 shows under their belt, but for a new watcher better keep it normal)
- not mundane but not too far "out there" (just the right amount of fantastical)
- no off putting material (gore, over-the-top violence, etc.)
- it should end on a positive note (I wouldn't have touched another anime ever again if Grave of the Fireflies were my first one)
With all those criteria listed, I believe the best show that ticks all the checkmarks is Anohana: The Flower We Saw That Day.
Great pick
If you liked the studio ghibli ones, try Wolf's Rain. It's a cool story. The creator then took his ideas that he didn't get to play with (subterfuge and deeply flawed characters) and created Darker than Black, a really awesome take on regular people getting superpowers.
Golden Boy, hands down.
I’m going to go old-school here:
Magic Knight Rayearth - admittedly the manga was better since the anime had to do filler episodes, but the idea of a good story with no good guys or bad guys, and subtly riffing on RPG tropes, was an interesting watch. The OAV is a different take but also good (object censored nudity notwithstanding) and has a tighter storyline.
The Slayers - one of the anime that I first watched, so it holds a special place in my heart. Megumi does an amazing job as Lina.
Kimagure Orange Road - one of the earlier popular anime in the ‘love triangle’ genre, with the fun add-on that the main character secretly has esper powers. The characters are pretty well-rounded too.
Gundam Wing - yes, yes, but jokes aside it isone of the anime that made Mobile Suit shows popular outside of Japan; if you want to try out the Mobile Suit genre then it’s not a bad one to start with. Plus the Gundam designs are pretty cool, especially the Endless Waltz versions.
…And one more modern one: Spy x Family. It’s cute, dramatic, and the kid actually acts like a kid and not a mini-adult.
I have this rule: The quality of an anime is inverse of the number of episodes it has.
Of course it is not always true but It is a good rule of thumb. Without knowing what you like, read some sinopses of the classics and see if any sparkle your interest.
You are already in a good track with movies, you can watch Akira or the first Ghost in the Shell for some good action sci-fi.
I personally didn't watch yet, so is not quite a recommendation but any Satoshi Kon movie is always very well received, like Perfect Blue.
There is some anthology movies, each with 3-4 short stories, that seems to be quite Good. I watched and liked alot Memories, and heard about Neo Tokio and Robot Carnival. All of them have one section done by Katsuhiro Ótimo, the author of Akira.
You can look up some OVA that are 1 to 6 EPS long like Read or Die, Bastard (the original one) and Blood: The last Vampire (the original one)
Some TV series that are 13 to 26 episodes long I really liked is Samurai Champloo. I also like the Netflix's Castlevania (the first one) and I cannot vouch for it because I didn't finish yet but Cyberpunk: Edgerunners was pretty good.
The next two are quite controversial but I think quite good are Kite and Mezzo Forte, both are 1 or 2 ep OVA. They are controversial because they are a mix of action anime and some hardcore hentai, but there are some cuts without the sex stuff (that is also completely unnecessary if I remember correctly). The action scenes are really good.
Definitely do NOT recommend Perfect Blue right out the gate for someone that only saw a few Ghibli films.
Its a great movie, and one that has a lot of cultural significance, but it is not a good pick for a first timer. It has some scenes that are intentionally extremely uncomfortable, and has a lot of cuts that can be hard to follow even for seasoned anime/film viewers.
This is kinda like recommending someone play Postal when someone asks what video games they should try if theyre starting out. While exaggerated a bit, it might be better to start them off with Mario instead.
You must not have finished readding his comment, in the last paragraph dude is recommending hentia with good action and story.
Trigun, Cowboy Bebop, Ghost in the Shell, Ninja Scroll, Fullmetal Alchemist and everything by Studio Ghibli I can NOT recommend because after seeing them, all other anime looks like childish crap by comparison. They've ruined me, don't let the same fate befall you!
Let me add Serial Experiments: Lain and Rurouni Kenshin.
Hard to give advice with no context. What do you like in other mediums? Anime is broad.
Your Name
Wolf Children
Attack on Titan is great if you don't mind the occasional bit of brutal, horrific violence.
I can't tell you where to start, but I can tell you where not to start.
Death Note is utter garbage. Anyone recommending it hasn't watched it in ten years, and is forgetting how contrived it is.
For example:
The main characters play tennis while trying to win a mental game of rock, paper, scissors.
They turn a scene about looking inconspicuous into one of those over-edited Indian soap operas (I'll take a chip... AND EAT IT!).
Misa is annoying as hell.
My spiciest anime hot take is that the Netflix adaption of Death Note was actually pretty good.
The problem was that anyone who liked the anime would hate it and vice versa, so it had no audience.
But if you disliked the anime, then I highly recommend checking out the Netflix adaption.
It answers the question “what if Light were cringe”.
What do you mean "what if"?
I have never seen Death Note, and don't intend to, but the primary target audience for like, 99.8% of all anime is teenagers. So hearing that it tries to appeal to that isn't all that shocking, honestly.
Naww. Your numbers don't track.
- Kids (6,487)
- Shounen (1,950)
- Seinen (1,015)
- Shoujo (490)
- Josei (151)
It all depends on the anime itself, really.
You can say the target audience for Ghibli films are kids, but the ones who get the most out of them are adults.
Many of the anime I would consider the best, would include themes I couldn't really understand the nuances of as a teenager, or even as a young adult, yet are published in Shonen/Young Jump.
What kind of interests do you have? Genres, settings, etc. Is there anything you don't have interest in? There are a lot of anime out there, and it would be better to suggest anime kknowing your interests rather than suggesting you something you may not be interested in.
Best to start is series that are finished with one season (24 max). My recommendations
- Charlotte
- Odd Taxi
- Gurren Lagann
- A Place Further than the Universe
- Cyberpunk Edgerunners
- Ping pong the Animation
- Lycoris Recoil
- Tatami Galaxy
My recommendations:
- Sazae-san
- Soreike! Anpanman
- Doraemon
- Chibi Maruko-chan
- Case Closed
- Crayon Shin-chan
- One Piece
(I woke up today and chose violence.)
Good lord, 2640 episodes with a total runtime of over 37 days.
I also just checked, and these shows (the ones still airing anyway) are able to have episode discussion threads requested from the bot if there are people that want to discuss them. Not sure how big the Chibi Maruko-chan audience might be in this community, but the capability is there if they exist and are looking for a home.
...these shows (the ones still airing anyway)...
I specifically listed only shows still in production to preclude any possibility of OP being able to finish, even if they did spend 37 days trying! 😈
(Also, Case Closed and One Piece are the only ones I've ever watched any episodes, of, LOL.)
Gurren Lagaan is a parody of mecha anime, it's not really something you can recommend to normies.
Yes. It doesn't look like normal mecha anime but I don't see it as a parody anime. I believe it can be a good anime for starter since Gurren Lagann shows how crazy and stupid anime can be sometime.
Sure, but the show is explicitly a deconstruction of Neon Genesis Evangelion.
NGE was a deconstruction of ordinary mecha anime.
I'm not saying someone with no experience with anime couldn't enjoy GL, but it's wrapped in so many layers of meta, most of the themes and inside jokes would be missed.
FCLC, Cowboy Bebop, Sword Art Online, and Frieren would be good ones to start with.
FCLC: modern setting with absurdist and Sci fi
Cowboy Bebop: future setting, Sci fi meets western
Sword Art Online: modern characters in a fantasy setting, fantasy with a tinge of Sci fi
Frieren: fantasy setting, plays with tropes of the genre so maybe leave this one until you've watched a couple of more traditional fantasy set series. Hard not to recommend it to everyone though.
FCLC
I thought it was FLCL, "Fooley Cooley"? Or am I thinking of something else?
Nope, that's correct. I misremembered.
How'd SAO make that list?
I would argue that there is a reason it has become such a huge success. It's the vanilla flavor of isekai anime.
That's why I recommended it. It's baby's first isekaia, basically.
Evangelion. Your brain will thank you for it!