this post was submitted on 15 Mar 2026
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Television
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Honestly, a lot of anime, but anime still has a stigma; one, of being "a cartoon" and thus "I'm too old for that"; two, of having controversial themes (like focusing on high school age characters). Or by leaning too far into fantasy, like isekai (lit. "other world" as in you're stuck there, the first example being Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and the most popular isekai anime being Sword Art Online) or super powers (like My Hero Academia, which fundamentally does the same thing as The Boys, but is slightly less edgy).
It's not easy to recommend anime to people who are predisposed to not wanting to watch it.
My two favourites are one-and-done, as in, when their season was over, the story was over, so they're relatively low commitment. The shorter one is Erased, with only 12 or 13 episodes. It's about a guy who is involuntarily thrown back in time a little while when someone around him dies, and he time loops until he can fix it. One day he finds his mother murdered, and he gets thrown back 18 years, and comes face to face with a little girl who was murdered when he was a kid, and he correctly guesses he must save her to save his mom. That's basically the first episode. Pay attention to the aspect ratio cluing you into whether you're in the present or a rewind. Also pay attention to the opening, it slightly changes a couple times (particularly near the end).
The other is Your Lie in April. A guy who used to play piano but stopped after his mother died, meets a violinist who wants a partner to play piano with her. She's going out with his best friend, but spends 20-odd episodes trying to get him to love music and life again. The lie in the title is hers, but it's not revealed until the very end, and it's not what you think. You'll be trying to call the ending, but the nature of the lie is a secondary twist that'll throw you for a loop even if you guessed the other thing. And the music is awesome — not just the themes (that's true of both of them) but also the music they actually play.
Bonus: if you liked those, Orange is a pretty easy recommendation. Plot similar to Erased, but plays with your emotions like Your Lie in April. It's about a girl who gets a letter from the future, telling her about her day before it happens, but it tells her to not invite the new boy out with her and her friends. Even though the letter is accurate, she does so anyway. At the end of the first episode, the friends, now grown, mourn the loss of the guy and contemplate how they could possibly get a message back to the past to change things. It's a heck of a ride with each episode ending in a cliffhanger. Something like 12 or 13 episodes and it's done.
Yes, when it comes to live-action stuff, I absolutely loved LOST, Wayward Pines, and currently enjoy FROM, Severance, and Silo — in case you're wondering. Similar energy on the live-action side. Emotional rollercoasters where you're wondering where it goes next. My bread and butter. Maybe one day I'll write one of my own.
I wish I could enjoy anime. I've tried several and what doesn't work for me is the extremely exaggerated emotional outbursts.
This is not me hating on anime. I just dont enjoy it because of this.
Thankfully there's more and more anime that doesn't have the exaggerated emotions problem.
Any recommendations?
Heading to work so it will be a while before I can respond in depth, but any particular genres you like?
The one I always recommend no matter what is a classic - Cowboy Bebob. That's the 1st anime I watched that didn't ruin it with "over acting" and started me on my anime appreciation.
I'll start with Cowboy Bebop, and I'll take any other recs when you have time. Thank you!!
Honestly, same. It always drags everything down. I've learned to tolerate it.
Your lie in April is a depressing as fuck anime.
Want to add another anime that isn't a shonen that is pretty solid is 3-gatsu no lion or "March comes in like a lion" in English. Well written.
Watched the first season, never got around to continuing it.
It did get me interested in shoji, or, Japanese chess. Or maybe chess for crazy people. Nine rows, nine columns, new pieces, and if they reach the ninth rank, they flip over and gain additional moves (kind of like checkers). Also, you can give up a turn to reclaim a piece your opponent captured, and place it in one of your home ranks (the first three).
Also, you can't watch March Comes in Like a Lion without getting "nyan-shoji" stuck in your head. It's an absolute travesty (and blessing) that they never made a full version of that and put it out on streaming. You think Baby Shark is bad? Let it Go? Golden? (Okay, nobody really thinks Golden is bad, parents are just tired of it.) None of them have anything on nyan-shoji.