So You Want to Get into Anime: The Best Gateway Anime Series to Indoctrinate Normies
Start your journey to become the King of the Weebs.
Even though anime has made its way into the mainstream over the past few years, negative notions about the medium persist.
With the exception of a few mature animated comedies (some of which are fantastic and thematically complex, like Bojack Horseman), animation in the US is still typically viewed as a medium for children. The idea that cartoons are kid sh*t, while perhaps understandable for someone who has only ever been exposed to Western media, is ignorant of the broad range of animation in other cultures.
In a similar vein, a lot of people insist that they just can't get into anime, or they stigmatize all of it because they don't like the "schoolgirl stuff." But it's important to remember that anime isn't a genre–It's a medium.
Individual anime series fall into every genre under the sun, just like movies and live-action TV shows. Saying you don't like anime because of the schoolgirl stuff (which is a very valid thing to dislike) is kind of like saying you don't like movies because of slasher films. You're writing off an entire medium of art over a genre that you can easily avoid.
So let's say you are open to watching anime, but aren't quite sure where to start. Or, more likely, maybe you already love anime and you're trying to find a series to convince your SO that the $200 action figure in your room was a totally reasonable thing to buy (it was, and your life choices are perfect). Just check out any of these gateway anime series that serve as perfect entry points into the medium's diverse offerings.
My Hero Academia
Shueisha
My Hero Academia is easily the best entry-point for newcomers to battle shonen (action-oriented series geared towards boys). On one hand, it doesn't try to reinvent the wheel. All of the tropes and cliches that make the battle shonen genre such a fun power fantasy – the form transformations, the over-the-top abilities, the coming back from the brink of defeat to win the fight – are all intact.
But where My Hero Academia shines is it's knack for putting those pieces together in the best way possible. The series is really fast-paced with no bloat, and the super hero high schooler premise should be extra-accessible for American comic book fans. If you're looking for a super fun anime, My Hero Academia is Plus Ultra (You'll get that later).
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