Unreviewed Gems – This Week in Anime

No one’s infallible, and sometimes the true gems of the streaming season slip through the cracks. Chris and Lucas take a look at what we may have missed.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
Necronomico and the Cosmic Horror Show, Betrothed to My Sister’s Ex, Maebashi Witches, Food for the Soul and Solo Camping for Two are streaming on Crunchyroll. Nukitashi the Animation streams on OceanVeil.
Chris, I know I’m repeating myself at this point, but the Summer 2025 season is one of the most stacked seasons of anime we’ve had in a while, if not ever! Between shows like DAN DA DAN, New Panty and Stocking, CITY The Animation, and at least half a dozen other heavy hitters, there are more top-tier anime seasons going around than anyone could keep up with, even reviewers like us!
Even with both of us tackling a couple of less prestigious titles this year (unless your Ruri Rocks is a cut above my weekly reviewed Bad Girl!), there are still plenty of interesting anime that ANN wasn’t able to include in the weekly review rotation. Which is why today I’d like us to talk about the anime that didn’t make the weekly review cut! The niche stuff! The less immediately appealing stuff! The stuff that makes people ask:
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Lucas, you know that you and I love our streaming reviews, but as anybody who’s even glanced at the lineup during Preview Guide times knows, there is too much anime being produced these days. It’s why the ANN powers-that-be have to narrow the field down in the first place with a vote-off each season. Unless something is particularly notable or heinous enough to inflict a hate-watch after only a couple of episodes, it means we or our esteemed cohorts don’t get to write it up weekly.

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This does apply to Ruri Rocks, thank you for asking, which I can only naturally assume got in on the powerful prestige and pomp of its presentation. ANN viewers simply appreciate massive, lovingly rendered…minerals.

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However, like you said, that can leave behind a few of the less attention-grabbing shows. Or even the ones that did get attention, but for the wrong reasons.

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To put my critic hat on, Necronomico and the Cosmic Horror Show is…fine. It’s one of those pieces of media where, if everything were just a little more polished and better executed, it’d be amazing; but as it stands, it’s perfectly fine. That being said, the unique premise of a bunch of streamers having to save the world from extremely online versions of cosmic horror creatures by competing in death games immediately piqued my interest, and it’s been a very stupid-fun watch weekly!

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Again, probably unfair, since they’ve seemingly fixed the subtitles, and starting to catch up on Necronomico for this column has confirmed for me that there was absolutely something worth watching here. I appreciate any anime with an amount of sauce on it, so I appreciate a series this dedicated to simply writing its title in different cool ways.
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I also appreciate any story that teaches the lesson that you can’t trust gamers.

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Necronomico definitely knows where to put its animation budget, and I appreciate the writers going out of their way to show that gamers are a bigger threat to humanity than any unknowable eldritch abomination. I also especially dig the more subtextual look at how the vulnerability and para-sociality inherent to being an online personality are fundamentally toxic to both the content creator and their audience!

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That being said, a lot of this show’s appeal probably comes more from my own preexisting opinions about streaming as a digital institution and penchant for death games, rather than that appreciation being something it will instill in its audience.

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Not that there aren’t other influences. The whole extra-dimensional game show angle calls to mind Kamen Rider Geats‘s take on the conceit. And I dig how it deploys a vindictive, vengeful protagonist whom I can still sympathize with and root for even as she’s disregarding the broader plight of the world. Maybe it helps that they contrast her with the aforementioned gamer.
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To your main point, though, with its unique social critique and digital culture focus, Necronomico feels like an anime that couldn’t have come out at any point earlier than 2025, and that makes it special enough that I can overlook its lack of polish and occasionally less than motivated plot developments.

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With all that said, sometimes the reasons a show doesn’t get voted in are more down to depressingly demographic reasons. You don’t have to tell me that readership skews more toward the dudely when so many Shonen Jump slugfests get in, while Betrothed to My Sister’s Ex, virtually the only specifically lady-focused romance story this season, gets stuck on the sidelines.

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It’d even admittedly passed me by before it was brought up per this column, which feels like a miss on my part, since at the very least, Count Granado slots pretty neatly into my strike zone. I’ve checked out lesser shows for thinner reasons!

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This one also completely passed me by (thanks for the heads up, Rebecca!), and I’ll also admit that I was expecting more of a textbook romance with a medieval/fantasy backdrop. Instead, from what I’ve seen so far, Betrothed to My Sister’s Ex is actually a pretty crunchy “politics of the court” drama!

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© とびらの・仲倉千景/双葉社・「ずたぼろ令嬢」製作委員会

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And, while I don’t entirely believe Marie’s entirely meek disposition after her lifetime of abuse at the hands of her father or the easily explained misunderstandings that serve as the inciting incidents of the show, I’m curious to see how all of this plays out now that I’m three episodes in!
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![]() © とびらの・仲倉千景/双葉社・「ずたぼろ令嬢」製作委員会 |
Not that rich stories of intertwined romance and palace intrigue don’t regularly resonate with ANN readership. Yatagarasu AKA BIRD SHOW and of course The Apothecary Diaries have been followed via write-ups here to much enthusiasm. But as you indicated, Sister’s Ex might’ve seemed just a bit too unassuming at the start. I’m only a few episodes in myself, and I recognize it takes that time to really get going. Even as I can also sate myself along the way with cuddly counts and super-strong maids.
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Though, for those looking for something very familiar but just a little subversive, I’m happy to report that I’ve kept up with Nukitashi the Animation following Steve and mine’s chat about politically charged smut anime from earlier this year and that I’m still enjoying it!

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It’s not the sexual content—readers demanded reviews of Interspecies Reviewers even after Funimation binned it. But Nukitashi‘s official streaming home on OceanVeil means a whole bunch of people simply aren’t going to pay for another service to keep up with one (1) currently airing show. Even one as appreciably outlandish as this one.

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More’s the pity. I know from reviewing Gushing Over Magical Girls myself that there could’ve been some fun to be had with this series week to week.

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Also, I’d like to publicly go on the record and say “WOULD” to Ikuko Onabuta. Yes, I know what her deal is and that she’s high-key problematic, but that’s also what motivated me to use all caps in my previous sentence.

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That source material setup does make me wonder if Nukitashi‘s denser political ambitions are more navigable in spaced out in-game form (which you can still buy here, speaking of!) but the anime’s working its mojo well enough for my tastes. I appreciate Studio Passione exercising their niche for something more clever like this compared to the sexual Surf Dracula that was Harem in the Labyrinth of Another World, which did, exhaustingly, net streaming reviews.

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Also, what the heck, here’s one more Ikuko thirst trap before we move on to the next title!
I can’t say that could ever be a common recurrence, I don’t speak for editorial management (if I did you know I’d let Rebecca do as many Precure streaming reviews as she wanted, democracy be damned), but it still shows how making your voices heard can affect things even after previews are said and done.
Do I have the time to campaign for another good cause right now? Probably not if I want to sleep anywhere close to eight hours a day. Plus column is already starting to get the word out on some of this season’s less broadly appealing and too weird to be widely popular titles!

© Yudai Debata, Kodansha /Solo Camping for Two Anime Production Committee
Answer: Yes. Readers didn’t miss much by skipping this one.

© Yudai Debata, Kodansha /Solo Camping for Two Anime Production Committee
That’s the end of the positives. Both in concept and execution, I feel either apathy or disdain for this show. While I think solitary wilderness survival is a great fit for a hobby anime, a better route would have been making a hyper-likable protagonist that I could listen to monologue for an entire episode, instead of jamming in a bland, cishet romance.
Also, from the limited animation to the blocking, and even the inconsistent or stilted anatomy of these characters, Solo Camping is a struggle to look at.

© Yudai Debata, Kodansha /Solo Camping for Two Anime Production Committee
I mainly bring up Solo Camping here as a way to demonstrate that sometimes…unpopular things are unpopular for a reason. Sometimes a series doesn’t get voted in for streaming reviews because squiffed subtitles skewed its perception or it’s on a funky streaming service, and other times it’s just as much because it’s a mid-tier title that wouldn’t be worth talking about weekly.
You’re not wrong! Sometimes a show is obscure because that’s all the attention and analysis it merits! And, while ANN’s process for determining what gets a new episode review week over week isn’t perfect, the crew and community built up here do as good of a job making educated guesses on what should get the spotlight as anyone could.
As well, even if things miss their opportunity, there’s always a chance to circle back around with full reviews. That’s how it was for Food For The Soul, a little slice-of-life cooking club show I honestly hadn’t even heard of until a few people I follow started chattering about it well after the season was over. To say nothing of Maebashi Witches, a series that Steve and I previewed and kinda blew off at first blush, before my cohost came roaring back to rave about the show in a full review.

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Dude, did you know that GoHands is making an isekai!? I can’t wait for people to force James to watch it!!!

© Yudai Debata, Kodansha /Solo Camping for Two Anime Production Committee
TL;DR: even as WAY too many anime come out every season, the ecosystem that covers the medium has never been more robust, and someone’s going to write about an anime you’re interested in one way or another, so cast your vote for something fun!

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