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This stop motion anime is set in a world where, instead of cars, humans drive around in giant, sentient guinea pigs. Each episode, the guinea pig cars face some kind of wacky situation. Sometimes, it’s something mundane like a morning traffic jam or a cat left in a guinea pig car on a hot day. Other times, it’s a full-on parody of Back to the Future or zombie apocalypse films. It’s consistently cute, silly, and utterly engrossing—you’d be surprised just how much emotion you can get out of a ball of felt. Honestly, it has some of the best comedic writing around—which is more than a little amazing coming from a show with literally zero dialogue. Simply put, it’s pure, condensed joy to watch.
TL;DR: This is an anime where a guinea pig, who is also a car (and a secret agent), does an Akira sliding stop while fighting against a giant, flying shark robot that’s shooting lasers—all while on a rescue mission to save a kidnapped guinea pig car with long, flowing, blond locks.
Runner Up: So I’m a Spider, So What? God Knew I Needed an Angel So He Gave Me My Wife Shirt
So I’m a Spider, So What? Is an isekai anime with a twist: what if you were reincarnated in another world but as a spider-monster instead of a human? While there are other characters, the vast majority of the anime is a one-woman-show put on by the ever-impressive Aoi Yūki. She gives a near-constant running monologue about the challenges she faces while trapped in a dangerous dungeon, at one point even putting on a real tour-de-force by playing four versions of herself at once and running through the gamut of emotions (she even sings the anime’s ending song). If she doesn’t receive an award or two for this performance, I’ll be shocked.
The other great aspect of this anime is its direction. While many shows create twists by withholding key information from both the characters and viewers, So I’m a Spider, So What? Hides its twists in plain sight. It uses your assumptions about what you see on the screen to mislead you about key aspects of the story. Something as simple as cutting from one location to another can be used to imply connections where there are none—or hide connections that should be obvious. All this makes the series worth not only a watch but a rewatch. You’ll be shocked at how much was just sitting out there in the open.
Worst: EX-ARM
Let’s be clear here. I haven’t seen EX-ARM. Not a single second of it. I saw some screenshots of the trailer back when it came out and decided in that moment that something that looked like a freshman animation project wasn’t going to be worth my time or aggravation.
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