One wouldn't normally have high expectations of a slime-befriending Monster Tamer like Yuji Sano, but Yuji happily proves doubters wrong. My Isekai Life: I Gained a Second Character Class and Became the Strongest Sage in the World mixes action, humor, and classic isekai tropes to create a unique and memorable series
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For every isekai anime that feels like a cheap knockoff of the same tired old premise, there's another innovative and exciting series that proves just how much life the genre has left in it. Whether the protagonist is trapped in a video game or transported to a magical realm by a spell gone awry, these fish-out-of-water tales show what it takes to make the best of a bad situation and maybe make some friends along the way.
8 Ascendance Of A Bookworm
Ascendance of a Bookworm is about how great reading is, which doesn't sound like the makings of an amazing series. However, this underrated isekai anime draws viewers further and further in, making them genuinely root for Myne as she learns to read. Its pace is slow compared to many, more action-oriented isekai, but Ascendance of a Bookworm knows better than to let itself be rushed.
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The sense of accomplishment that comes with gradually achieving one's goal, step by step, will be familiar to many, and it's on full display here. Rather than cut corners and present a shallow fantasy world, Ascendance of a Bookworm rounds out its protagonist and its world, making for a gripping experience.
7 My Next Life As A Villainess: All Routes Lead To Doom!
Most isekai play with the usual anime tropes, with many not venturing far off the beaten path. My Next Life As a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom! puts a spin on convention by having its protagonist be a villain, albeit an unwilling one.
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Katarina, like many gamers, would love to live in the world of her favorite video game, but that wish turns out to have a dark side when she finds herself reincarnated not as the game's hero but as its villain. From there, Katarina must make it her mission not only to survive but to try and find some kind of happiness despite her twisted fate.My Next Life as a Villainess doesn't revolutionize the genre, but it does keep viewers on their toes as they try to guess how Katarina will manage, especially since she knows the villain is supposed to die at the end.
6 Outbreak Company
In a way, Outbreak Company seems designed to appeal to many of the most popular trends, not only in anime but in pop culture in general, mixing isekai with parody and even the harem genre. Shnishi, the show's hero, is an otaku suddenly tossed into a fantasy world where he makes it his mission to share otaku culture.
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Outbreak Company is, in the best way, all about geekiness, celebrating parts of culture that are sometimes brushed aside or frowned upon. Having the hero's mission be "explain why geeky things are great" instead of "defeat five legendary dragons and save the world" is a welcome change of pace. It helps that the series understands exactly how ridiculous it is and plays into that fact at every opportunity, making it just as good a comedy as My Isekai Life.
5 Grimgar: Ashes And Illusions
One of the best parts of isekai anime is watching the hero rise to power, learning new abilities, spells, or combat techniques that allow them to thrive in their new and deadly world. Grimgar: Ashes and Illusions proves that even this tried-and-true trope can be dispensed with and still create an amazing series.
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The heroes of Grimgar aren't special, at least in terms of their combat or magical prowess. They're ordinary people flung into a fantasy world and forced to take the only job they can to survive: serving as lowly grunts in the local military. The life of a soldier is far less flashy than that of most isekai heroes, but that's what makes Grimgar: Ashes and Illusions special. The focus here is on realism, and it pays off.
4 Now And Then, Here And There
Some isekai heroes are more heroic than others, willing to put themselves on the line for strangers, intervening in dangerous situations in the name of doing what's right. That altruism is valuable, but sometimes it comes at a price.
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Shuu Matsutani learns that the hard way when he tries to save a strange girl from machines bent on kidnapping her. As a result, he ends up flung into a desert fantasy world, attacked by soldiers, and accused of the theft of a magical pendant. Now And Then, Here And There is darker than its somewhat childish style would suggest, but it offers fans an off-beat and challenging departure from conventional isekai.
3 Log Horizon
My Isekai Life and Log Horizon are both about gaming, but the latter series takes a more practical look at what life in a game might actually look like. Transported to the world of Elder Tale, the heroes of this brilliant isekai demonstrate their own brilliance by leveraging everything they know about the game to their advantage.
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The characters aren't simply in an MMORPG; they take advantage of that knowledge, using metagaming and well-known strategies of team composition, drawing aggro, and synergizing abilities in order to take down their enemies. There are plenty of isekai about characters trapped in MMOs, but Log Horizon shows just how different such a show can be when the characters actually use their gaming knowledge for practical purposes.
2 Drifters
Whereas most isekai delight in the invention of new characters, Drifters delights in taking real-world historical figures, throwing them together in an impossible situation, and seeing what happens. Joan of Arc, Oda Nobunaga, and other famous faces join together in an attempt to save (or conquer) the world.
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Drifters blends fantasy, history, and war, drawing from a roster of real-life military figures to round out its exceptional cast. Given that the creator of Drifters also created Hellsing Ultimate, there's an expectation of quality here, and this anime doesn't disappoint. Gorgeous animation, fluid combat, and a cast that's strong in more ways than one make Drifters an isekai to watch, even for viewers who aren't history buffs.
1 Restaurant To Another World
For those that want to take a break from darker or more intense isekai there's Restaurant to Another World, a series that blends food, coziness, and supernatural creatures. The show revolves around Nekoya, a popular Tokyo restaurant that dabbles in something other than ordinary cuisine on the weekend, serving customers from other worlds.
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The series' unusual premise doesn't disappoint, and one of the highlights is watching mythical creatures drop by Tokyo to taste humanity's newest delicacies. It's as warm and charming as one would expect from a great slice-of-life anime or food series, offering a welcome respite from the swords and bloodshed seen elsewhere.
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