Anime Feminist Recommendations of Summer 2023
Our latest recs are a grab bag of Summer shows, carryovers, and endearing oddballs you might have missed.
Our latest recs are a grab bag of Summer shows, carryovers, and endearing oddballs you might have missed.
Alex, Toni, and Peter wrap-up the small and disappointing Summer season by talking about its handful of bright stars.
Alex, Toni, and Peter check-in on a light and breezy Summer season!
Deeper themes are a little thin on the ground this season, but there’s still some very fun adventures to be had.
While it can’t match spring’s bounty, summer has a few gems to offer.
I don’t think this has enough staying power for me, but if readers are okay with the religious set dressing then this slice-of-life romantic comedy might be for you.
Helck starts strong with a premiere that holds the potential for more if the series leans into its most interesting aspects and really runs with the source material.
To properly summarize this show, I need to be bouncing up and down on a sugar high at daycare.
Good news: it has great animation and mecha designs, and intriguing worldbuilding.
Bad news: All of this is in service of a plot that can only be described as Toxic Masculinity: The Anime.
Everything about it is undermined by how poorly it treats its female lead.
Really gotta give this one buttfor.
There’s definitely an opportunity here for this show to examine the nuances of living under capitalism and how it’s not sustainable. It’s too early to say how the series will handle its themes, but even so the production is fantastic and dynamic.
BanG Dream’s newest entry kicks off its premiere by bringing the band in proximity, though not together, setting the foundation for a music-focused series that seems to be taking its time on the rise to being pretty great.
I won’t lie to you: Liar, Liar is just okay, and based on its overall premise, will likely stay that way for viewers who aren’t already invested in the source novel series.
Dark Gathering is a fun horror comedy show with a lot of potential for creepy shenanigans and a somewhat alienated view of girls
There are two things that piqued my interest about The Gene of AI: its framing of technological progression and the relative restraint of its writing.
This was a treat–a show with thoughtful worldbuilding, a dose of self-awareness without dipping into edgelord irony, and compelling characters that were a source of great comedy.
Mark “ruining the opportunity for a perfectly serviceable cat-based iyashikei” down as yet another reason this season is shaping up cursed.
If the male-targeted market is saturated with extremely similar reincarnation isekai, maybe it’s fair enough that the female-targeted market is getting its own version of the trend. It’s equity, ya know?
Staring at a vending machine for half an hour and watching people buy chips is perhaps an experiment in what people will tolerate as entertainment.