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Scott Pilgrim blocks an incoming punch from Matthew Patel in Scott Pilgrim Takes Off. Image: Science Saru/Netflix

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The must-watch anime to look out for in fall 2023

Scott Pilgrim Takes Off marks the triumphant return of the best fighter in the Ontario province

Toussaint Egan (he/him) is a curation editor, out to highlight the best movies, TV, anime, comics, and games. He has been writing professionally for over a decade.

2023 has already been a great year for anime, and it’s only going to get better. The fall anime season (which runs from October through December) is right around the corner, and with it comes some of the most highly anticipated premieres of the year, and some cool new releases flying slightly under the radar.

The long-awaited premieres of anime adaptations of Naoki Urasawa’s Pluto and Bryan Lee O’Malley’s Scott Pilgrim will finally debut on Netflix, the final final part of Attack on Titan’s final season finally comes to Crunchyroll, and a slew of other exciting releases are due, like the second season of Spy x Family, Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End, Under Ninja, and more.

We’ll continue to update this list as we get a clearer picture of everything this upcoming anime season has to offer, but in the meantime, here are some of the most exciting anime airing this fall you should look forward to.

Our latest update added FLCL: Shoegaze, Tokyo Revengers season 3, Undead Unluck, and The Apothecary Diaries.


Pluto

Release date: Oct. 26
Where to watch: Netflix

The long-awaited anime based on Naoki Urasawa’s fantastic Pluto manga is almost here.

The passion project of legendary anime producer Masao Maruyama, this limited series follows the story of Gesicht, a robot detective on the hunt for the serial killer responsible for the murder of the world’s strongest robots. Based on Osamu Tezuka’s iconic manga Astro Boy, Urasawa’s neo-noir sci-fi thriller is considered one of the best manga of its time, so expectations are high for this new anime to knock it out of the park.

Directed by Toshio Kawaguchi (animation director on Ghost in the Shell: Arise) and co-produced by Studio M2 and Tezuka Productions, each of the eight episodes of the series will run approximately 60 minutes. From the looks of the teaser trailer released to announce the premiere date, this massive production over six years in the making is shaping up to be more than worth the wait.

Spy x Family (season 2)

Release date: Oct. 7
Where to watch: Crunchyroll

The Forger family returns this fall for another season following the breakout success of Spy x Family’s premiere last year. The second season of the anime is confirmed to adapt the Cruise Adventure Arc of Tatsuya Endo’s original manga, following assassin Yor accepting an assignment to protect a client aboard the Princess Lorelai cruise ship. Both Loid and Anya win tickets to ride the same ship, so Yor must find a way to complete her job without revealing her true identity to them. Feels like a lot trouble could be circumvented by just having a straightforward conversation, but what do I know? I’m not a secret agent, a killer for hire, or a clairvoyant little girl with a mean right hook.

Attack on Titan Final Season: The Final Chapters Special 2

Release date: Nov. 4
Where to watch: Crunchyroll

Finally, the final final chapter of Attack on Titan’s final season is nearly upon us. With Eren’s choice to trigger the Rumbling and embark on an omnicidal campaign across Earth, his former allies Mikasa and Armin must make a difficult decision: Kill Eren and stop the Colossal Titans from decimating the planet, or allow Eren to create a new empire for the Subjects of Ymir as the cycle of violence continues unabated. We already know how the manga ends, but it’s not yet entirely certain what the anime will choose to alter as we march toward the series’ apocalyptic conclusion.

Scott Pilgrim Takes Off

Release date: Nov. 17
Where to watch: Netflix

Over 13 years since Edgar Wright first brought Bryan Lee O’Malley’s romantic action comedy series to the silver screen, Scott Pilgrim returns this fall with an anime adaptation courtesy of Science Saru (Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken!, Devilman Crybaby).

Although based on O’Malley’s 2004 graphic novel series, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off will not be a beat-for-beat adaptation of the 20-something bass player’s journey to defeat the seven evil exes of his new girlfriend, Ramona Flowers. “If you think you know what you’re going to see, you don’t,” executive producer and co-writer BenDavid Grabinski said in a recent Los Angeles Times interview.

Whether this new take on the character will be the “Rebuild of Evangelion” for the Scott Pilgrim franchise is unclear, but what is clear is the amount of talent attached to this latest adaptation. Not only is Abel Góngora of Star Wars: Visions fame directing Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, but the entire cast of the 2010 Edgar Wright film is returning to reprise their characters, including Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Chris Evans, and Jason Schwartzman. No matter how you look at it, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off is sure to be one of this season’s biggest anime premieres.

FLCL: Grunge

Release date: Sept. 9
Where to watch: Adult Swim, Max

Five years since the premieres of FLCL: Progressive and FLCL: Alternative, the third sequel to Kazuya Tsurumaki’s surreal sci-fi coming-of-age anime arrives this fall in the form of FLCL: Grunge. Like the original series, FLCL: Grunge follows the story of a teenage boy who crosses paths with Haruko Haruhara, an anarchic extraterrestrial with a proclivity for mischief and clocking people upside their heads with her left-handed electric bass guitar.

Where this new series breaks with previous entries is in its 3DCG animation style. Initial impressions and reviews of the series’ premiere episode have been mixed so far, but only time will tell how FLCL: Grunge will live up to the lofty heights of Tsurumaki’s original series.

FLCL: Shoegaze

Release date: Sept. 30
Where to watch: Adult Swim, Max

The second FLCL sequel of the year features the return of director Yutaka Uemura, who previously worked on 2018’s FLCL: Alternative, with animation courtesy of studio Nut (Saga of Tanya the Evil, Deca-Dence). Set many years after the events of Alternative, FLCL: Shoegaze follows two teenagers who, frustrated by the humdrum monotony of their everyday lives, plot to destroy a tower in their hometown they believe is responsible for their way of life.

Most of the details of this sequel are being kept under wraps, but what we do know is that Kana Koumoto — the protagonist of FLCL: Alternative — will make an appearance as a supporting character and that this will be the first FLCL story not to feature Haruko Haruhara, the iconic guitar-wielding chaos agent introduced in the first series. But if that’s true, who’s this new girl who looks and sounds just like her? We’ll have to wait for the series premiere to find out.

Phoenix: Eden17

Release date: Sept. 13
Where to watch: Hulu

Based on Astro Boy creator Osamu Tezuka’s unfinished, generation-spanning fantasy manga, Phoenix: Eden17 follows the story of Romi, a young woman who flees from planet Earth aboard a spaceship bound for the alien planet of Eden17 with her lover, George, to establish a new home. Discovering the planet to be barren of life, Romi embarks on a journey across space and time in an effort to reunite with her loved ones and see Earth just one more time. Produced by Studio 4°C (Tekkonkinkreet) and directed by Shōjirō Nishimi (MFKZ), Phoenix: Eden17 is shaping up to be a faithful and beautiful tribute to one of the most celebrated stories by one of the most pioneering anime creators of all time.

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End

Release date: Sept. 29
Where to watch: Crunchyroll

What happens to the heroes after “happily ever after”? Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End, the new anime based on Kanehito Yamada and Tsukasa Abe’s ongoing fantasy adventure manga, will attempt to tell that story when it premieres later this month.

Produced by studio Madhouse and directed by Keiichirō Saitō (Bocchi the Rock!, ACCA: 13-Territory Inspection Dept. Regards), the series follows Frieren, an elf mage who traveled alongside a group of heroes to defeat a demon king that threatened to enslave the world. After completing their journey, the heroes part ways, with Frieren setting out on her own to find a new purpose in life. As the years pass, Frieren finds herself questioning her past choices as she reflects on the value of her past experiences and friendships.

Tokyo Revengers Tenjiku Arc (season 3)

Release date: Oct. 3
Where to watch: Hulu

Tokyo Revengers returns for another season of time-traveling street gang warfare, as protagonist Takemichi returns to the past in a desperate bid to save the Tokyo Manji Gang from the machinations of Kisaki and the corruption of the gang’s leader, Mikey. There’s even more trouble this season, as Kisaki has joined forces with Tenjiku, a powerful up-and-coming gang led by the volatile and charismatic Izana Kurokawa, who embarks on a warpath to destroy every gang in Japan. Will Takemichi be able to avert catastrophe, or is the fate of Tokyo Manji irrevocably sealed?

KamiErabi GOD.app

Release date: Oct. 5
Where to watch: Crunchyroll

What do you get when you get Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters director Hiroyuki Seshita, Soul Eater and Fire Force creator Atsushi Ohkubo, and game designer Yoko Taro of Nier: Automata fame together in a room to produce an anime? You get KamiErabi GOD.app, a new original series about a group of young combatants known as “Influencers” who are battling it out for the prize of achieving Godhood. Sounds similar to Death Note creator Tsugumi Ohba’s manga Platinum End, doesn’t it? From the looks of the trailer and the particular talent attached to this production, audiences can probably expect one or two dozen surprises from the get-go when the series premieres later this season.

Under Ninja

Release date: Oct. 5
Where to watch: Crunchyroll

This action comedy follows a high school loner named Kurō Kumogakure who is approached with quite the part-time job offer: Become a modern-day ninja and complete international assassinations on behalf of a shadowy organization. He’s not alone, either; Kurō will cross paths with a number of fellow young assassins as he completes assignments, relying on them and often even fighting against them as he works to earn a living. Produced by Tezuka Productions and directed by Satoshi Kuwabara (Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Dark Side of Dimensions, Black Jack), Under Ninja is based on the ongoing manga series of the same name written and illustrated by Kengo Hanazawa.

Undead Unluck

Release date: Oct. 6
Where to watch: Hulu

What happens when a preternaturally unlucky girl crosses paths with a guy who just can’t die? Adapted from Yoshifumi Tozuka’s manga, Undead Unluck follows Fuuko Izumo, a young woman who has lived in self-imposed isolation ever since her supernatural abilities inadvertently caused the death of over 200 people. Think Rogue from X-Men, but instead of sucking the life force out of people, she causes Final Destination levels of havoc and destruction through skin-to-skin contact. Moments from taking her own life, Fuuko meets “Andy,” an immortal man cursed with regenerative abilities. Pursued by a mysterious organization known as “The Union,” Fuuko and Andy are thrust into a world of bizarre adversaries and high stakes.

Produced by David Production (JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure), Undead Unluck features character designs by Hideyuki Morioka and music by Kenichiro Suehiro, and it is directed by Yuki Yase, all of whom previously worked together on the first season of Fire Force. The premise sounds cool, and the animation of Andy regenerating his body parts is reminiscent of Goto “Muscular” Imasuji’s Quirk ability in My Hero Academia, so I’m very interested to see how well this series follows through on its concept.

The Apothecary Diaries

Release date: Oct. 21
Where to watch: Crunchyroll

Fans of The Ancient Magus’ Bride have the second cour of the anime’s second season to look forward to on Oct. 5, but if you’re curious what director Norihiro Naganuma has been up to, look no further than The Apothecary Diaries. Based on the light novel series written by Natsu Hyūga and illustrated by Touko Shino, the series follows Maomao, an inquisitive pharmacist who is kidnapped and sold to the imperial palace as a servant. After secretly discovering the origin of the mysterious illness plaguing the emperor’s children and curing them, Maomao is enlisted by an influential advisors to solve more mysteries surrounding the imperial court. Produced by Toho Animation Studio and OLM, the trailer looks gorgeous, and the premise of a young woman solving mysteries while keeping her identity a secret makes for an intriguing setup.

Akuma-kun

Release date: Nov. 9
Where to watch: Netflix

This supernatural comedy series follows Shingo “Akuma-kun” Umoregii, a fifth grader with a prodigious amount of occult wisdom who, unbeknownst to his friends and family, is the reincarnation of a child prodigy reborn every 10,000 years. Seeking to create a world without strife for humans, Akuma-kun summons host of spirits and demons to do his bidding, which often backfires in a number of hilarious ways. If you count yourself a fan of the Addams Family comics or the humorously macabre works of Jhonen Vasquez, Akuma-kun should be right up your alley.