Gazettely’s 10 Best Anime of 2023: A Banner Year for Bold Storytelling

Streams and Sequels Widen Anime’s Audience More Than Ever

2023 was a watershed moment for anime. Riding a wave of growing mainstream popularity, this year saw anime explode into global consciousness like never before. Fueled by smash hits on streaming platforms, anime could no longer be dismissed as a niche interest. Its emotionally powerful storytelling and stunning visual artistry captivated wider audiences across multiple genres.

Several clear trends defined the anime landscape this year. Series embracing creative risks and subverting expectations resonated strongly. Vinland Saga, for example, transitioned from a bloody revenge saga into a contemplative redemption story centered on the humanity of its leads. Character-driven dramas like Skip & Loafer charmed viewers with relatable adolescent struggles. Pluto and Heavenly Delusion explored identity and morality through sci-fi mysteries.

At the same time, sequels to established franchises reached new heights. Demon Slayer continued to impress with its fluid animation, while Jujutsu Kaisen kept fans hooked with an enthralling blend of nitro-fueled action and affecting character moments. Even quieter series like Spy x Family drew in crowds with its quirky situational comedy set against a backdrop of international espionage.

2023 proved anime’s ability to reach wider audiences without sacrificing its unique aesthetic and thematic vision. Whether it was dark, socially conscious sci-fi or lighthearted family sitcoms, standout series stayed true to the medium’s penchant for emotionally resonant stories told through groundbreaking visuals. Anime has clearly staked its place in the global entertainment landscape.

10. Spy X Family Season 2

Spy X Family

Spy X Family’s first season enchanted viewers with its quirky sitcom antics, following a makeshift family of secret agents pretending to be normal. Season 2 doubles down on the whimsical fun. Assassin mom Yor, spy dad Loid, and telepathic daughter Anya continue their precarious balancing act, hiding their covert missions even from each other while somehow forming an adorably dysfunctional family unit.

Much of the show’s goofy charm comes from Anya. With her exaggerated facial expressions and endless wonder at the ordinary world, she grounds the zany spy shenanigans in childlike relatability. In Season 2, her attempts at card tricks and befriending the school’s most aloof student lead to escapades threatening to blow her family’s cover. But she takes each mishap in endearing stride.

Between Yor’s close calls hiding bodies, Loid’s high-stakes political maneuverings, and Anya just trying to make friends, Spy X Family nails domestic sitcom tropes within an absurd secret agent setting. It all culminates around Anya’s school cultural festival, where the Forgers must work together to complete their mission without revealing their secrets. The escalating tension combines with Anya’s hilarious reactions for Grade A family fun. Spy X Family Season 2 retains the magic, continuing one of 2023’s most irrepressibly charming shows.

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9. Heavenly Delusion

A boy and girl wander through the post-cataclysmic ruins of Tokyo, searching desperately for a place called “Heaven.” So begins Heavenly Delusion, a gorgeously animated sci-fi mystery series with echoes of iconic classics like Akira. Through the wasteland trek of young Maru and Kiruko, it weaves a profound tale of friendship against nihilistic odds.

Strange otherworldly creatures haunt the shells of collapsed buildings, which only Maru can vanquish with his mysterious abilities. Meanwhile, psychic researchers experiment on children eerily similar to him underground. The intricate unfolding connections between these two plotlines immerse viewers in mysteries spanning friendship, adulthood, and the human drive to find meaning amidst apocalyptic tragedy.

Dynamic action scenes captured through stunning animation elevate the show’s contemplative themes. The gorgeous vistas of a reclaimed natural world juxtapose the deathly stillness of decaying skyscrapers. And the charming rapport between stubborn, protective Maru and bubbly, motivated Kiruko grounds their philosophical journey in intimate humanity.

Full of visual poetry and emotional resonance, Heavenly Delusion delivers a powerful post-apocalyptic fable perfect for fans of haunting sci-fi and coming-of-age drama. Its spectacular animation and imaginative twists add up to what’s undoubtedly one of 2023’s most compelling new anime.

8. Demon Slayer Season 3

Demon Slayer returns, picking up after the bombastic Entertainment District Arc for a visually breathtaking if narratively underwhelming next chapter. The Swordsmith Village Arc follows Tanjiro Kamado and Nezuko traveling to repair Tanjiro’s sword. But a new demon threat soon embroils them and the flashy Love Hashira Mitsuri in more bloody battles.

Make no mistake: Swordsmith Village Arc is a spectacular achievement in animation. Ufotable’s fluid fight choreography and painterly vistas continue to push the upper limits of television anime. The story itself may feel low-stakes, with few plot revelations to chew on. But taken moment to moment, Demon Slayer remains a masterclass in audiovisual flair.

Where the season truly soars is in its emotional denouement. In the final episodes, we witness stirring moments of hard-won redemption between Tanjiro and Nezuko and their demon adversary Gyutaro. For a show often focusing more on style than substance, these affecting character beats land with incredible poignancy. Demon Slayer may not have delivered the most riveting narrative, but its visual splendor and sentimental high points prove why it’s still one of anime’s most popular series.

7. Skip and Loafer

For a gentle anime balm to cleanse the palate after Demon Slayer’s gory spectacle, look no further than Skip and Loafer. This modest yet affecting slice-of-life drama follows Mitsumi, an ambitious teenager who moves from her rural town to attend a Tokyo prep school. Out of her element on her very first day, she finds an unlikely guide in laidback popular boy Shima, sparking an endearing odd couple friendship.

Skip and Loafer charms through relatability. Mitsumi’s awkward earnestness as she adjusts to big city life makes her trials and triumphs equally heartwarming. Meanwhile, Shima’s chilled-out wisdom and empathy refreshingly subvert aloof pretty boy tropes. Together they make a grounded pair, complemented by a host of well-realized friends struggling through universal high school concerns.

While slow-paced, Skip and Loafer understands the emotional magnitude of coming-of-age turning points. We feel the nervous excitement of joining clubs, the simmering jealousy seeing friends drift away, the swooning possibility of first love. Buoyed by strong characterization and expressive animation, Skip and Loafer captures adolescent life’s small yet monumental moments with grace.

6. Blue Lock

For sports anime fans exhausted by repetitive tropes about friendship and teamwork, Blue Lock provides a viciously compelling antidote. More Hunger Games than Haikyuu!!, this soccer battle royale nuclei on superstar strikers ruthlessly competing to be Japan’s next prodigy. With tension ratcheted up by innovative rivalries and matches more riveting than the actual World Cup, Blue Lock smashes expectations with brutal glee.

After an embarrassing early exit from the 2018 World Cup, Japan’s Football Association institutes the Blue Lock program, locking 300 talented teenagers in a facility where only the most selfish goal-scorer will emerge triumphant. What follows is less an uplifting underdog story than a series of psychologically brutal contests between talented narcissists unleashing their id.

Yet somehow, Blue Lock makes even the unlikeliest characters captivating studies in obsession and tragedy. At the show’s core lies aloof genius striker Yoichi Isagi, whose analytical play contrasts entertainingly with arrogantly talented megastars like Bachira and Reo. Watching them challenge new opponents and strategies in elimination battle after battle proves as tense as any mainstream sports drama, with animation and direction intensifying the match’s escalating mind games.

Far from just a shiny gimmick, Blue Lock earns its subversive edge by using character-driven contests and masterful technical play to explore ambition’s seductive danger. In the process, it becomes one of 2023’s most innovative and irresistibly intense anime experiences.

5. Bungo Stray Dogs Seasons 4 & 5

Bungo Stray Dogs, the supernaturally-tinged mystery series inspired by legendary real-life authors, returns with two killer seasons that may be its finest yet. Picking up after the sprawling Guild War, the Armed Detective Agency now faces public disgrace as Japan’s government turns against them. Framed for murder and threatened with dissolution, the heroes must unmask the conspiracy targeting them through white-knuckle gambits.

Veteran fans will relish seeing fan-favorite abilities back in full force, from chuunibyou wizard Lovecraft to living weapon Akiko. But the real stars are genius detectives Ranpo and Dazai, whose mental chess matches against equally cunning foes drive the plot’s web of intrigue. Their razor-sharp schemes and counter-schemes make for crime drama as gripping as Death Note.

Yet despite its sprawling battles across international cities, Bungo Stray Dogs stays grounded through endearing character moments. The Armed Detective Agency feels like found family, from Kyoka learning what heroism means to Yosana’s misguided rivalry with his brother. These personal arcs ensure that as the crises escalate from Assassins Guilds to Eldritch terrors, we feel the crew’s emotional stakes rising just as high.

Both seasons balance an enormous ensemble cast with consistently imaginative conflicts grounded in their relationships. Coming after weaker entries, Bungo Stray Dogs returns to peak form with supremely satisfying supernatural sleuthing.

4. Pluto

In a future where humans and robots coexist, someone begins methodically assassinating the world’s most advanced androids. So begins Pluto, a riveting sci-fi noir that explores prejudice and personhood through murder. Adapted from an acclaimed manga which itself drew inspiration from legendary Astro Boy creator Osamu Tezuka, Pluto is an intertextual miracle made even more powerful and relevant today.

As detectives scramble to uncover the android killer’s motives, the mystery serves as a pretext for profound ruminations on artificial intelligence’s essence. We witness gentle household robot Atom grappling with rage for the first time as his loved ones die around him. Military machine Brando discovers poetry and nonviolence even as he hunts the killer. Through their distinct relationships with humans ranging from servitude to rivalry to friendship, the robots achieve nuanced emotional depth.

These affecting vignettes get interleaved within tense detective thriller plotting across a beautifully atmospheric retrofuture. The relaxed glitz of futuristic skylines contrast ominously with sewers and black markets lurking beneath. Accordingly, Pluto keeps seesawing expectations, refusing easy judgments even as moral lines blur between humans and nonhumans.

Equal parts psychologically astute sci-fi drama and pulse-pounding mystery, Pluto examines human ugliness and wonder through android eyes to tell a story distressingly relevant for an AI-enabled age. It’s a staggering work of dramatic irony and visual storytelling, weaving together literary and stylistic lineages for an intensely moving modern allegory.

3. Jujutsu Kaisen Season 2

Jujutsu Kaisen explodes back this year with a sophomore season somehow topping its acclaimed debut. While the anime’s first half explores warmer prefame days for protagonist Megumi’s mentor Gojo, the real standout is cour 2’s emotionally turbulent Shibuya Incident arc pitching students against utterly feral demons. Barreling from tragic backstories to horny fanservice to gory creature battles, it makes Jujutsu Kaisen’s magical mayhem at once more affecting and more metal than ever before.

After tempering Season 1’s bombastic pace with Gojo’s more lighthearted origin, Jujutsu Kaisen charges headlong into darkness as morally ambiguous mage Geto leads brutal spirits called Curses to attack Shibuya. Unprepared sorcerers must quickly harness new abilities and rally fallen allies against opponents demonstrating absolutely satanic powers. Each skirmish delivers imaginatively Gross monsters and fluid martial arts choreography made even more metal by Mappa’s gritty animation.

Yet the show stays grounded through the students’ camaraderie and struggles coping with the costs of violence. Kindhearted Everyman Yuji pursues redemption for the Curse lurking inside him while also inspiring others to retain hope. And fan-favorite pretty boy Megumi carries new weight from confronting how far one should go for ambition.

Jujutsu Kaisen keeps maturing with a deft balance of sensitive characterization and virtuosically gory action. Bursting with visual splatter and thematic subtlety, its new season confirms the franchise as a battle shonen titan.

2. Trigun Stampede

Over two decades after its original anime debuted, madcap sci-fi western Trigun gets resurrected through sleek modern polish. Trigun Stampede revisits legendary gunman Vash the Stampede in a planet-hopping actioner realizing the property’s full potential. Updating the animation and deepening side characters while retaining the heart of its goofy relatable protagonist, Stampede makes Trigun’s absurd world more thrilling and emotionally resonant than ever.

That ramshackle frontier spirit remains intact as we open on Vash preventing a saloon brawl before visiting orphans he secretly protects. His bumbling do-gooder energy instantly endears amidst a corrupt society squeezed for resources. Yet regularly interspersed flashbacks hint at painful history behind his cheery peacekeeping.

As Vash wanders dusty towns stopping robbers, his origins get slowly unpacked alongside new threats emerging. Past allies and villains alike hunt his 60 billion double dollar bounty, unveiling his connection to emerging extraterrestrial superweapons. Yet even when confronting genocide conspiracies orchestrated by his own brother, Vash sticks to his code against killing, instead disarming opponents through clever gun-fu reflecting his ultimate pacifism.

This dichotomy between a boisterous jokester and quiet atoner trying to save everyone makes Vash one of anime’s most compellingly sympathetic heroes. We root for the product of so much violence who chooses mercy whenever possible because his humanity still shines through suffering. Backed by MADHOUSE’s slick animation and compelling new dynamics for side characters like insurance agent Millie, Trigun Stampede makes an old favorite new again through stellar presentation, empathy, and heart.

1. Vinland Saga Season 2

Last year’s best anime makes an unbelievingly strong case to retain the title with a profoundly stirring second season. After the tragic events concluding Vinland Saga’s intensely violent first season, Thorfinn has cast aside revenge to instead aimlessly wander as an enslaved farm laborer. Abandoning the relentless action that originally hooked fans, the sequel pursues an emotionally devastating redemption arc realization that’s both patient and intimate. Matching contemplative tone with jaw-dropping direction, Vinland Saga matures into a legitimate masterpiece.

Oddly, the season starts not through Thorfinn’s eyes but those around him. We observe the shell he’s become through worried whispers, feeling the raw gnawing trauma of his experiences rippling outward. Only later do we sit with him alone dragging ploughs under grayscale skies, haunted by ghosts of those he’s killed. By tracing his numb routine for episodes before the first conversation, Vinland Saga grounds itself in evocative mood.

As Thorfinn befriends chatty new slave Einar, their philosophical talks prod him from nihilistic stupor towards rediscovering meaning. But the show lingers abundantly on quiet despair beforehand so we feel the magnitude of violence’s dehumanizing effects. No longer defined by fights, Vinland Saga now derives tension from watching characters wrestling internal demons.

Accordingly, its exquisite craft focuses more on emotional crescendos. Soul-stirring orchestral swells accompany cathartic moments like Thorfinn collapsing before forgiven enemies. Watercolor sunrises glow brighter through prisoner’s eyes freed after endless barren seasons. Hardship makes fleeting dreams sweeter, visualized through direction as lyrical as animation is fluid.

By tempering predecessor’s plot-fueled operatics for personal ethical odyssey, Vinland Saga’s second outing concludes a monumental epic now destined for anime pantheon. Its rare insight into trauma through virtuosic restraint cements a masterwork.

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