The Best Anime Premieres of Fall 2025, Ranked

After a summer that barraged us with very good cartoons, this fall’s slate of anime is admittedly much more reserved, and if you were to be reductive, you might say it’s mostly a bunch of sequels alongside a handful of worthwhile newcomers. Thankfully, though, there’s more to this batch of shows than just its two biggest headliners, Spy x Family and the “final” season of My Hero Academia (after Attack on Titan’s three-season-long final season, I’ll never trust this term again). Specifically, there’s plenty to watch if you’re open-minded, as demonstrated by its standouts: horse girls, a buff Santa Claus, and punch-happy noblewomen abound. Let’s get into it.
Honorable Mentions
With last season’s disaster lesbian extradoinare, WataNare’s Renako, temporarily leaving the airwaves, we badly needed a new hot-mess sapphic to fill her place. Luckily, Nana Futami from A Mangaka’s Weirdly Wonderful Workplace is here to carry the torch. She’s a newcomer manga artist who is catastrophically down bad for her very cool editor, Sato. Hijinks ensued, and this first episode quickly established the charming dynamic between our lead and her counterpart, setting the stage for more entertaining girlfail action.
On the other end of the tonal spectrum, This Monster Wants to Eat Me is a far more somber yuri series. It’s centered on Hinako, a girl suffering from waves of depression as she struggles to cope with the tragic loss of her family. Before long, she stumbles into the sightlines of Shiori, a mermaid who, as the show’s title indicates, does in fact want to eat her. Despite this seemingly off-putting premise, the premiere did a good job conveying Hinako’s mental space, using deep-sea imagery to capture how she’s drowning in grief.
While My Hero Academia’s first episodes used to serve as thinly veiled recaps meant to remind literal children of the plot, the latest (and allegedly last) season of the series kicked off with a bang. Here, things begin with a high-octane battle that demonstrates just how good this superhero story could have been if it stuck to its original premise (a powerless protagonist who wants to be a hero). Bones went all-out and delivered action spectacle that suggests we may be in for some fun this season.
5. May I Ask For One Final Thing?
The first episode of May I Ask For One Final Thing? puts all of its eggs into one basket, but admittedly, it’s a very good basket. After watching our heroine, Scarlet, endure a long list of abuses that are fairly standard in this type of “villainess” adjacent series, we get the payoff: our protagonist punching the lights out of a roomful of despicable rich men. After a relatively visually conservative episode, Liden Films delivers bone-crushing blows as Scarlet well and truly demolishes these awful people, her gloved fists pounding them into dust. If nothing else, it demonstrates that this series, which is about the familiar concept of a noblewoman getting her engagement to a prince annulled due to that prince’s selfish whims, is willing to take some wild swings. Let’s hope the rest of the series lives up to this opening haymaker.