10 Best Anime Of All Time Ranked

Hi Everyone, My name is Divyanshu Rawat, an anime and web series lover who can’t resist great works in the field of Entertainment. Today I will give you some of the best anime of all times that everyone should watch.

The list is available below –

1. Pokemon

The anime is about the journey of Ash Ketchum to become a Pokemon master, a Pokémon Master candidate (Satoshi in Japan), as he and a select group of pals tour the Pokémon universe with their Pokémon partners.

The Pokémon Company, formed by Nintendo, Game Freak, and Creatures, is the organization in charge of the Japanese media franchise known as Pokémon (Monster). The “Pokémon” franchise was started by Satoshi Tajiri in 1996 and is based on fictitious animals.

2. Dragon Ball Z

Dragon Ball Z continues the exploits of the adult Goku as he saves the earth with the help of his friends from a variety of bad guys, including androids with superhuman strength and nearly indestructible magical monsters.

Japanese anime television programme Dragon Ball Z is created by Toei Animation. It is the follow-up to the 1986 Dragon Ball anime series and adapts the final 325 chapters of the original Dragon Ball manga series written and illustrated by Akira Toriyama. It is a part of the Dragon Ball media brand. From April 1989 to January 1996, the series ran on Fuji TV in Japan. It was afterwards dub for international distribution in at least 81 countries.

3. Beyblade

The show chronicles the exploits of Ryuga, a person possessing the Forbidden Bey known as Lightning L-Drago, and Gingka Hagane, a Beyblader who is trying to destroy the wicked Dark Nebula organisation while looking for his buried past.

Beyblade is a 2001 Korean-Japanese co-produced anime television series that is based on the same-named manga series by Takao Aoki and the Beyblade spinning-top game from Takara Tomy. Under Toshifumi Kawase’s direction, Madhouse produced the 51-episode series.

4. Naruto

Masashi Kishimoto is the author and illustrator of the Japanese manga series Naruto. It follows the tale of young ninja Naruto Uzumaki, who aspires to be recognised by his peers and the Hokage, the head of his village. The narrative is divided into two sections, the first taking place when Naruto was a preteen and the second when he was a teen. The two one-shot manga by Kishimoto that served as the basis for the series are Naruto and Karakuri (1995), which garnered Kishimoto an honourable mention in Shueisha’s monthly Hop Step Award the following year (1997).

5. Demon Slayer

Koyoharu Gotouge is a Japanese manga creator best known for his manga series Demon Slayer. It centres on teenage Tanjiro Kamado, who aspires to become a demon hunter following the massacre of his family and the transformation of his younger sister Nezuko into a monster. From February 2016 to May 2020, it was serialised in Shueisha’s shunen manga magazine Weekly Shnen Jump, and its chapters were collected in 23 tankbon volumes. Viz Media and Shueisha both released it concurrently on their Manga Plus platforms in English.

6. One Piece

The Japanese manga series One Piece was created by Eiichiro Oda. Since July 1997, it has been serialised in Shueisha’s shnen manga magazine Weekly Shnen Jump, and as of November 2022, its individual chapters have been collected into 104 tank-bon volumes. The plot centres on the exploits of Monkey D. Luffy, a young man whose unintended consumption of a Devil Fruit left him with a body made of rubber. In order to succeed Gol D. Roger as the new King of the Pirates, Luffy explores the Grand Line with his pirate band, the Straw Hat Pirates, in search of the ultimate treasure known as the “One Piece.”

7. One Punch Man

Japanese superhero comic series One-Punch Man was produced by One. It depicts the tale of Saitama, a superhero who gets bored due to a lack of challenge because he can destroy any foe with a single punch. Early in 2009, One created the webcomic manga version.

On the Tonari no Young Jump website of Shueisha, a digital manga remake featuring Yusuke Murata’s illustrations debuted in June 2012. Its chapters are occasionally collected and released as separate tank-bon volumes. There have been 27 volumes published as of November 2022. For English-language distribution in North America, Viz Media has licenced the remake manga and is serialising it in their digital Weekly Shonen Jump magazine.

8. Fist Of The North Star

Buronson and Tetsuo Hara collaborated on the Japanese manga series Fist of the North Star. It was serialised in Weekly Shnen Jump, a publication of Shueisha that publishes shnen manga, for 245 issues from 1983 to 1988 before being first collected in 27 tankbon volumes under the Jump Comics banner. The plot, which is set on a post-nuclear-war Earth, centres on a warrior named Kenshiro who practises the deadly martial art known as Hokuto Shinken. Kenshiro has the skill to kill opponents by striking their hidden vital areas, which frequently ends in a particularly brutal and bloody demise.

Kenshiro devotes his life to combating other martial artists, including his own “brothers” from the same school, as well as the numerous gangs, robbers, and warlords who pose a threat to the lives of the helpless and innocent.

9. Neon Genesis Evangelion

As they attempt to stop Angels from triggering any more cataclysms, the Evangelion pilots and Nerv members’ thoughts and feelings are examined in the series. They are required to comprehend both the underlying causes of events and the driving forces behind human behaviour throughout the process. The show has been called a deconstruction of the mecha genre and uses archetypal imagery drawn from Jewish and Christian mystical traditions, such as Midrashic stories and Kabbalah, as well as Shinto mythology. Also strongly highlighted are the psychoanalytic explanations of human behaviour advanced by Freud and Jung.

The Japanese mecha anime television series Neon Genesis Evangelion was created by Gainax, animated by Tatsunoko, and directed by Hideaki Anno. It aired on TV Tokyo from October 1995 to March 1996. The events of Evangelion take place fifteen years after a catastrophic event, especially in the futuristic fortified city of Tokyo-3. Shinji Ikari, a young man recruited by his father Gendo to the mysterious organisation Nerv, serves as the film’s main character. He controls Evangelion, a massive bio-mecha used in battle against “Angels”.

10. Sailor Moon

Japanese manga creator Naoko Takeuchi created the Sailor Moon series. It was first published in 52 distinct chapters across 18 volumes in Kodansha’s shjo manga magazine Nakayoshi from 1991 to 1997. The show centres on the exploits of Usagi Tsukino, a schoolgirl who becomes Sailor Moon to look for the “Legendary Silver Crystal,” a mystical item. In order to stop the theft of the Silver Crystal and the destruction of the Solar System, she leads a team of allies known as the Sailor Soldiers, subsequently renamed Sailor Guardians.

From 1992 to 1997, an anime series based on the manga was developed by Toei Animation and aired in Japan. In addition, Toei created a television special, three short films, and three animated feature films based on the anime. Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon, a live-action television adaption, broadcast from 2003 to 2004, and Sailor Moon Crystal, another anime series, started simulcasting in 2014.