Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon. Entire thread

i need good anime tell me

Name: luhrer 2007-10-24 19:32

please 4chan i need to know good anime thats in English, no
hentai please,

Name: Anonymous 2007-11-03 9:59

20) Ghost in the Shell: Stand-Alone Complex and 2nd GIG - both are great series that are far superior to the movies in my opinion. The third Ghost in the Shell series, Solid State Society is gonna be out this fall, keep an eye out for it.
21) Juuni Kokki: it seems like one of those girl that gets sent to a fantasy land anime, but it actually has quite a bit of depth and design
22) Read or Die (TV series and OVA): based on a series of thrilling novels, Read or Die combines culture, travel, espionage, politics, assassins and shadowy government agencies, along with a book-obsessed secret agent with the ability to control paper to her will, into a very interesting story
23) Puchi Puri Yuushi: one of Gainax's surprising series after Evangelion. Five young girls who are brought up at a special academy to raise them as princesses in a fantasy-like setting. Each are the respective avatar of the five races: human, spirit, heaven, demonic, and fairy. Their goal is to obtain the Princess Tiara, that holds the key to the stability of their world. Thoroughly enjoyable, except Anno was showing a little of his angtsy side again near the end.
24) Last Exile: nice graphics and a detailed world design, Last Exile is set in a technological society that is centered upon non-jet propulsion aircraft (a sort of anti-gravity is used instead) where childhood friends Klaus and Lavie rescue a mysterious girl and get drafted into the most feared mercenary group that prowls the skies
25) Gunbuster: Hideaki Anno's earliest work. One of the best anime OVAs in the late 1980's (No, really). Recent graduate Noriko and her classmates are enlisted to fight against an alien threat that seeks to destroy all of humanity.
26) Great Teacher Onizuka: thought-provoking and funny, GTO explores the life of a former punk, Eikichi Onizuka as a teacher for a class of troubled students. Think To Sir, With Love with a Japanese-twist
27) Key the Metal Idol: I never thought I would see an anime that would make me think about society's ills. A young girl named Key must make 30,000 friends soon, or she'll never be able to regain her humanity. Be warned, this series is heavy in drama and can really take a toll on you
28) Any Hayao Miyazaki work: no need for explanation here
29) Tomorrow's Nadja: this anime series is actually a revamp of older anime series that focused on coming-to-age stories about young children in earlier time periods. These series were well represented in the 1970's and 1980's amongst Japanese anime. A cute series about the orphan Nadja that searches for her mother, while accompanying a traveling troupe in Edwardian-era Europe
30) Azumanga Daioh: insanely funny series about six schoolgirls and their off-beat faculty
31) Galaxy Express 999: a great space opera anime that was made in the 1970's and remade in the early 2000's.
32) Infinite Ryvius: an anime-version of Lord of the Flies set in space. Watch it and see what you think
33) Keroro Gunsou: another of my personal favorites. Sergeant Keroro leads an undercover team of alien frogs from the Planet Keroro to conquer Earth. However, things don't go as planned for the hapless yet comical Keroro because of his addiction of Gundam models and other hijinks that lead him away from his mission on Earth. Lots of parody value in the episodes.
34) Aura Battler Dunbine: Another classic mecha series by Yoshiyuki Tomino. Earthling Sho Zama and a band of rebels with their aura battlers (basically mechs that resemble bugs powered by human bioenergy) fight in the trans-dimensional world of Bryston Well
35) Hime-chan no Ribbon: another classic of old-school mahou shoujo. Tomboyish Himeko (Hime-chan) is given a magical ribbon which can change her into any other person in the world. Her favorite stuffed lion, Pokota is brought to life in order to help Hime-chan use the ribbon wisely, but true to her nature, Himeko impulsively uses the ribbon and learns many lessons about her identity and the effects of using the ribbon's transforming ability
36) Tomorrow's Joe: Before Rocky, Raging Bull, Cinderella Man, or even Hajime no Ippo; Tomorrow's Joe was THE boxing series that was made in the early 1970's. The mischevious but good-hearted Joe Yabuki vows to become one of the greatest boxers in the world. His rivalry against opponents like Tohru Rikiishi, Carlos Rivera, and eventually the bantamweight champion of the world, Jose Mendoza have been the stuff of legends in sports manga/anime. The ending is something special too...
37) Gun x Sword: at first I wasn't too impressed with this series, but eventually I realized that it wasn't just a Trigun-lookalike anime. Lone swordsman Van vows to avenge his fiance's death against the illusive "Clawed Man" and his plot to change the world. Gundam SEED fans should take note about the satire that's in here.
38) Serial Experiments Lain: One of the best anime pieces on cultural immersion, philosophy, and media interaction. Definitely top ten material.

Newer Posts
Don't change these.
Name: Email:
Entire Thread Thread List