10 Anime That Are Actually Better Than Their Manga

When it comes to anime adaptations, people will always be critical of how they’re handled, and for good reason. Between excessive filler episodes and arcs, the tendency for an anime to wildly change stories and character personalities, and simply doing a poor job of animating a series, anime adaptations have a long history of being poor representations of the original manga, and even with how much anime has improved in recent years, it’s still far too common an occurrence.

As common as it is for anime adaptations to be poor representations of their source material, that’s not always the case; not only are there plenty of anime adaptations that do a good job of bringing their stories to life, but in many cases, an adaptation will arguably surpass the source material through how much life the animation, direction, and even the writing can provide. A few anime adaptations like that are especially noteworthy, and each one is nothing if not a must-watch for any anime fan.

Look Back

Tatsuki Fujimoto’s Look Back was already a phenomenal short story, but the film adaptation from Studio Durian somehow made it even better. In addition to a few original scenes to flesh out the story, Look Back’s film adaptation always uses its gorgeous animation and stellar direction to emphasize every dramatic turn, and in many instances it does an even better job than the manga.

One of the biggest problems with Chainsaw Man season 1 was that its cinematic approach was often a disservice to the chaotic energy of the source material, and it was so bad that the movie had to completely reinvent the anime’s style. Fortunately, that same style is far more fitting for Look Back, and it’s easy to see why the film became such a massive hit.

Witch Hat Atelier

Witch-Hat-Atelier-Episode-5-Coco

Bug Films’ Witch Hat Atelier has been one of the biggest shows of the spring 2026 anime season, and it’s easy to see why. The original artwork and paneling from the manga were already amazing, but the anime expands on certain scenes to make them more bombastic and all-around gorgeous, all of which does wonders to emphasize the magical elements of the narrative.

After the failure that was 2023’s Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead, Bug Films seemed like a studio that was doomed for failure, but the massive success of Witch Hat Atelier more than proves that they can make something consistently gorgeous when granted a healthy production cycle. Witch Hat Atelier is already a modern classic in the making, and it’s all thanks to its phenomenal anime adaptation.

Dandadan

Key visual for Dandadan season 3
Dandadan-Season-3-Key-Visual

Science Saru’s Dandadan was a major hit from day one, and much of that is owed to how amazing an adaptation it is. Not only does the anime occasionally stretch out scenes from the manga to add more life to the action, but with how generally clever and stellar the animation and direction are, the comedy and intensity of every scene always hits as hard as possible, and it’s always fun to watch because of that.

Science Saru has always been famous for how well they use creative and all-around gorgeous animation to bring their projects to life, and of their most recent projects, Dandadan is easily the best example. As fantastic as the manga is, the anime is somehow even better, and hopefully, Dandadan season 3 will take things even further.

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu No Yaiba

Tanjiro and Nezuko
Demon-Slayer-Tanjiro-Nezuko

Over the past decade, Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba has become one of the biggest anime franchises in the world, and much of that is owed to its anime adaptation from Ufotable. While the original manga by Koyoharu Gotouge often had messy art and lackluster fight choreography, most notably in the early arcs, the Demon Slayer anime completely reworked the series with cleaner art and gorgeous, over-the-top fight scenes and choreography, all of which is further enhanced by the stellar soundtrack and direction.



















Kimetsu no Yaiba · Final Selection
How Well Do You Know Demon Slayer?
“Set your heart ablaze.”

TanjiroThe kind-hearted blade

NezukoThe sleeping demon

HashiraNine pillars

MuzanProgenitor of demons

BreathingTotal concentration

01

The series follows a young charcoal seller whose family is slaughtered by a demon. Only his sister Nezuko survives — turned into a demon herself. What is the protagonist’s full family name?




✓ Correct! Tanjiro Kamado is the eldest son of the Kamado family of charcoal-makers. The Kamado name, written with characters meaning “furnace,” is a subtle nod to the family’s ancient connection to fire and Sun Breathing — the original breathing style all others descend from.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is Kamado. Agatsuma is Zenitsu’s surname, Tomioka is the Water Hashira Giyu’s, and Hashibira belongs to the boar-headed Inosuke. Tanjiro Kamado’s family lived high in the mountains as charcoal-burners — a lineage that secretly carried the art of Sun Breathing.

02

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba began as a serialized manga in Weekly Shonen Jump in 2016 before becoming a global anime phenomenon. Which mangaka created it?




✓ Correct! Koyoharu Gotouge is famously private — the pen name gives no indication of gender, and the author has consistently declined interviews and public appearances. The manga ran for 205 chapters from 2016 to 2020 and sold over 150 million copies, making it one of the best-selling manga of all time.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is Koyoharu Gotouge. Hajime Isayama created Attack on Titan, Eiichiro Oda writes One Piece, and Masashi Kishimoto created Naruto. Gotouge wrapped Demon Slayer’s main story in 2020 after just four years — a surprisingly short run for a series of that scale.

03

Before the Final Selection, Tanjiro trains for two years on Mount Sagiri under former Hashira Sakonji Urokodaki. Which breathing style does Urokodaki teach him?




✓ Correct! Water Breathing has ten forms plus the Eleventh Form (Dead Calm), the last of which was created by Urokodaki’s finest student, Giyu Tomioka. Tanjiro later combines Water Breathing with his family’s ancestral Hinokami Kagura (Sun Breathing), which proves far more powerful against high-ranking demons.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is Water Breathing. Thunder Breathing is Zenitsu’s style, Flame Breathing is the Rengoku family’s specialty, and Stone Breathing belongs to Gyomei Himejima. Urokodaki was the Water Hashira decades before Giyu, and his pupil Tanjiro eventually surpasses him by unlocking Sun Breathing.

04

Nezuko Kamado is the only known demon allowed to travel with the Demon Slayer Corps — she wears a bamboo muzzle and is carried in a sealed wooden box by day. What makes her so uniquely valuable to her brother’s cause?




✓ Correct! Nezuko restores her body and power by sleeping, bypassing the need to consume humans that defines every other demon. Her unbroken love for her brother — and her implanted suggestion from Urokodaki that all humans are her family — anchors her humanity. She does eventually gain sunlight immunity, but that’s a much later plot twist.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is that she sleeps instead of feeding on humans. Nezuko can change her size (true but minor) and eventually gains immunity to sunlight (near the end of the series), but her defining trait is that she refuses to eat humans — sustaining herself through long periods of sleep instead.

05

The series’ ultimate antagonist is the original demon — a creature who has walked the earth for over a thousand years, creating every other demon from his own blood. What is his name?




✓ Correct! Muzan Kibutsuji is the Demon King — created accidentally by a Heian-era doctor whose medicine overcame his terminal illness but turned him into an immortal monster. His lifelong obsession is curing his sunlight weakness. Akaza, Douma, and Kokushibo are all Upper Moon demons under his command — terrifying but all creations of Muzan himself.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is Muzan Kibutsuji. Akaza (Upper Moon 3), Douma (Upper Moon 2), and Kokushibo (Upper Moon 1) are all fearsome Twelve Kizuki, but they’re Muzan’s creations — not the original demon. Muzan is the source of every demon in the story, and destroying him ends the demon curse forever.

06

The Mugen Train arc features Tanjiro being mentored by the cheerfully boisterous Flame Hashira — a man whose final words (“set your heart ablaze”) became a fandom rallying cry. What is his name?




✓ Correct! Kyojuro Rengoku — the Flame Hashira with the iconic yellow-and-red flame-haori and the signature “UMAI!” catchphrase — battles Upper Moon 3 Akaza in one of the series’ most devastating fights. His death and final speech to Tanjiro became one of the most emotionally impactful moments in modern anime.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is Kyojuro Rengoku. Giyu Tomioka is the Water Hashira (the stoic one who saves Tanjiro and Nezuko in episode 1), Tengen Uzui is the flamboyant Sound Hashira from the Entertainment District arc, and Gyomei Himejima is the gentle-giant Stone Hashira — the Corps’ strongest.

07

Demon Slayers wield Nichirin Blades — color-changing katanas forged from sun-infused ore. When a slayer first draws theirs, the blade takes on a color reflecting their breathing style. What color does Tanjiro’s blade turn?




✓ Correct! Tanjiro’s blade turns black — an extremely rare color associated in-universe with bad omens and the superstition that black-blade wielders don’t live long. The real reason, revealed later, is that black blades resonate with Sun Breathing, the original breathing style from which all others descend.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is black. Water Breathing typically produces blue (like Giyu’s), Mist Breathing produces a pale greenish-white, and Flame Breathing a vivid red-orange. Tanjiro’s pitch-black blade is considered unlucky — but it’s actually the mark of a Sun Breathing user, the rarest and most powerful style of all.

08

The 2020 anime film Demon Slayer: Mugen Train became a worldwide box-office phenomenon despite releasing in the middle of the pandemic. What record did it famously break in Japan?




✓ Correct! Mugen Train dethroned Hayao Miyazaki’s Spirited Away, which had held the Japanese box-office record for 19 years. Ufotable’s breathtaking animation of the Tanjiro-versus-Akaza battle, paired with Rengoku’s emotional farewell, turned a theatrical arc of the anime into the highest-grossing film in Japanese history.

✗ Demon deception! The answer is that it surpassed Spirited Away as Japan’s highest-grossing film ever. Mugen Train didn’t win an Oscar (though it was eligible) and hasn’t crossed $1 billion globally. But in Japan, it dethroned Miyazaki’s 2001 classic — a record many thought would stand forever.

Mission Complete · Scroll Sealed
Your Corps Rank

/ 8

Hashira-level expert — or still at Mizunoto?

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba has a genuinely engaging story and fun cast of characters, so its success isn’t all due to spectacle, but it’s safe to say that it enhances the viewing experience in every way. The Demon Slayer anime is nothing short of a masterpiece, and it’s easy to see how it took the world by storm in such a short amount of time.

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End

Key visual for Frieren: Beyond Journey's End season 2
Frieren-Beyond-Journeys-End-Season-2 Key-Visual

Like many other modern anime adaptations, Madhouse’s Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End greatly benefited from its adaptation. In addition to looking genuinely gorgeous, Frieren’s anime does a lot to expand on the story, not only with more character movements and interactions, but by greatly expanding on the manga’s fight scenes, with some of the best-looking ones originally lasting just a few pages in the manga.

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End already succeeded as a fun take on classic fantasy mixed with a contemplative story about human connections, but the amazing work of the anime takes it all to an entirely different level. Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End season 3 is coming in 2027, and with the story it’s set to tell, it’s bound to make things more amazing than ever.

MAR

MÄR_ Märchen Awakens Romance

SynergySP’s MAR was never that big of a series, and when it comes to animation, the anime is usually just average at best. Where the anime truly shines, however, is in its writing; while the last few arcs of the manga were incredibly rushed and led to a lackluster finale, MAR’s anime takes things slower to allow for more character development and worldbuilding, and even the finale is reworked to be far more satisfying than the manga.

Feature header showing characters from Log Horizon, Escaflowne, and Rayearth

8 Near-Perfect Isekai Anime No One Talks About

As big as isekai anime have gotten, plenty of them are still prone to fall under the radar, even though a few of them are nothing short of perfection.

Most of the time, an anime that wildly diverges from the manga with filler arcs and an original ending would be terrible, but with how basic a story MAR was, the anime’s changes did wonders to bring out the best of it. MAR never became a big hit, and that makes it all the more surprising that it has such a fantastic adaptation.

Bocchi The Rock!

Kessoku Band from Bocchi the Rock in a music video for the series as all of them hold their instruments while Bocchi looks worried.
Bocchi-The-Rock-Kessoku-Band-Music-Video

Before its premiere, CloverWorks’ Bocchi the Rock! was seen as just another “cute girls doing cute things” anime, but the final product was anything but. Not only were the manga’s musical elements used to produce an incredible, in-universe soundtrack, but the animation took its absurdist humor and greatly expanded on it with creative visuals and animation techniques, even using mixed media to sell its surreal qualities.

The Bocchi the Rock! manga is plenty of fun on its own, but with how well the amazing soundtrack and surreal visuals enhance its heartwarming, character-driven story, the anime is on an entirely different level. The anime is a true work of art, and with Bocchi the Rock! season 2 in development, there’s plenty more in store.

The Melancholy Of Haruhi Suzumiya

Untitled design (100)
Characters from The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya

Kyoto Animation’s The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya is one of the studio’s most iconic works, and much of that is owed to how it adapted the original story. The way the first season was aired in anachronic order was already a great hook that played into the chaotic nature of the story, but even beyond that, the great animation and clever direction do wonders to add even more life to the story, with notable examples being the handling of Kyon’s conflict in the movie, and even the highly controversial Endless Eight arc and the subtle differences between each episode.

While The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya was originally a light novel, it also has a manga adaptation.

The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya might be fairly niche now, but there was a time when it was the most popular anime in the world, and with how great a job Kyoto Animation did of bringing the story to life, it’s easy to see why. Even after 20 years, few anime even come close to it in quality, and that’s unlikely to change anytime soon.

K-On!

The main cast of K-On!
K-On-Main-Cast

K-On! is another one of the best anime from Kyoto Animation, and that’s surprising, given how wildly different it is from the manga. Season 1, for example, greatly extends certain chapters for more gags and character work, and that’s taken to an even greater extreme in season 2, where the story is fleshed out with new stories and character arcs, all of which feel surprisingly natural within the narrative.

The K-On! manga is a fine enough slice of life manga, but the great writing of the anime does so much to give the cast and narrative some much-needed depth, and with its incredible artwork and animation, that’s even easier to see at every turn. It’s a rare example of an anime being saved by filler, and it’s no wonder why K-On! is often seen as the signature “cute girls doing cute things” anime.

Mob Psycho 100

Mob Psycho 100 poster depicting Mob surrounded by images of his friends with a smile and an outstretched hand.
Mob Psycho 100 poster depicting Mob surrounded by images of his friends with a smile and an outstretched hand.

Bones Film’s Mob Psycho 100 is one of the biggest and most iconic anime of the decade, and it’s easy to see why. While the fight scenes and panelling were fairly simple in the manga, the Mob Psycho 100 anime makes everything consistently over-the-top with gorgeously fluid animation and direction, and surprisingly, the unconventional art style does wonders to help convey that at every turn.

When it comes to modern anime, few have ever come close to the visual spectacle of Mob Psycho 100, and when combined with its stellar comedy and heartwarming coming-of-age story, there’s even more reason to love it. Mob Psycho 100 is an anime unlike any other, and that makes it unsurprising to say that it’s the best anime that’s better than its manga.


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Release Date

2016 – 2022

Network

Tokyo MX

Directors

Katsuya Shigehara, Kenichi Fujisawa, Yohei Shindo, Hiroshi Takeuchi, Tsuyoshi Tobita, Takashi Kawabata, Shohei Miyake, Yoko Kanamori, Toshiyuki Sone, Tomoaki Ohta

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Setsuo Ito

    Shigeo ‘Mob’ Kageyama (voice)

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Takahiro Sakurai

    Arataka Reigen (voice)


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