THE BEST ANIME OF 2018 (SO FAR)

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Don't miss Thrillist’s guides to the best action anime and the best anime on Netflix right now. And don’t sleep on last year’s best anime series either. Throughout the year, this list will highlight the most outstanding new titles, with new updates regularly. These are the 2018 you should keep an eye on, so get watching.
asobi asobase workshop of fun

27. Asobi Asobase – workshop of fun –

Director: Seiji Kishi
Assistant director: Yu Kinome
Series composition: Yuko Kakihara
Character designer, Chief animation director: Keiko Kurosawa
Animation production: Lerche
Asobi Asobase successfully debunks the idea that anime comedies set in high school are overly sanitized. It certainly properly conveys how nasty teens can be -- although it comes with a lack of restraint that provide its own share of headaches. The series follows three girls -- the lively yet vapid Hanako, mischievous pretend-foreign student Olivia, and the more stoic, but still eccentric Kasumi -- who form the Pastimers Club, where they kill time after school in increasingly more outrageous ways, escalating to ridiculous levels in no time. For such a seemingly random series of absurd events, the gags are well constructed, and the ludicrous art (namely, the over-expressive reactions) that it inherited from the original comic is a good fit for its madness.

It’d be slightly irresponsible to leave a recommendation for this show with no disclaimers. Asobi Asobase isn’t for everyone -- it’s loud and obnoxious, intentionally so -- but even if this kind of comedy resonates with you, a few scattered gags are outright inexcusable. (A recurring incident regarding the mystery of someone’s gender stands out in particular.) Moments like this represent a just fraction of the series, and for all of its hilarious, irreverent moments, not knowing where to draw the line puts Asobi Asobase at the bottom of the best shows this year.
Available on: Crunchyroll
gun gale online

26. Sword Art Online Alternative: Gun Gale Online

Director: Masayuki Sakoi
Series composition, script: Yousuke Kuroda
Character designer: Yoshio Kozakai
Animation production: Studio 3hz
Karen Kohiruimaki is a college student with a complex about her tall height, which she tries to escape from by fully immersing herself into a game where she can play as a cute, short avatar. Regardless of how you felt about its parent, the massively popular but also wildly divisive Sword Art Online, this spin-off is a beast of its own that deserves to be judged on its own merit. And besides being set in the same virtual reality shooting game as the third arc in the original series and the occasional passing mention of some events, Gun Gale Online’s tone couldn’t be more different. The fact that there’s no inherent mortal threat allows it to have a lot more fun with itself, best exemplified by the anecdote that its firearms-loving writer -- Keiichi Sigsawa, of Kino’s Journey fame -- made a cameo appearance to fund the tournament that serves as an excuse to have cool, ridiculous fights within the game. While we still have a protagonist pulling off the impossible to succeed, Karen's wild pirouettes and ridiculous strategies are thrilling to experience on a moment-to-moment basis, so sit back and enjoy watching this adorable ball of pink wreck everyone in a VR FPS.
Available on: CrunchyrollHulu
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karakai

24. Karakai Jozu no Takagi-san

Director: Hiroaki Akagi
Series composer: Michiko Yokote
Character designer: Aya Takano
Animation production: Shin-Ei Animation
Nishitaka, fed up with the fact that the classmate he has an obvious crush for keeps teasing him, keeps coming up with increasingly convoluted challenges in which to outwit her. What he may never realize is that his subject of affection Takagi doesn’t only share those feelings, but is also always prepared to make his plans collapse on themselves. Told in a series of daily-life vignettes, a show like this could easily come across as mean, seeing how much the poor boy ends up suffering. But most of the time it’s his silly proud middle-schooler attitude that earns him his defeats, and the efforts to underline the affection she feels ends up being quite charming. While not as outrageously funny as some similar series like My Neighbor Seki, this adaptation ended up in the right hands to make its more mundane stories feel fulfilling. Leaving aside the one recurring short segment involving other classmates, Karakai Jozu no Takagi-sanfocuses exclusively in one set of interactions, but it gets it so right that it doesn’t matter.
Available on: Crunchyroll
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PONYCAN USA
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DAVID PRODUCTION

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